From 52b5da120608bce9cb9e16f66d213f46d2c1d574 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: BaMikusi <70342380+BaMikusi@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Thu, 16 Nov 2023 15:22:25 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/2] Update 2023-11-16-harald-heckmann-in-memoriam.md --- _posts/en/2023-11/2023-11-16-harald-heckmann-in-memoriam.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/_posts/en/2023-11/2023-11-16-harald-heckmann-in-memoriam.md b/_posts/en/2023-11/2023-11-16-harald-heckmann-in-memoriam.md index 6e98ad1d4..03fe765fc 100644 --- a/_posts/en/2023-11/2023-11-16-harald-heckmann-in-memoriam.md +++ b/_posts/en/2023-11/2023-11-16-harald-heckmann-in-memoriam.md @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ email: '' author: '' --- -In Harald Heckmann, the world of music archivists and documentors has lost one of its most distinguished personalities. Those of us who had the privilege of working with him have also lost a wise mentor and fatherly friend. +In Harald Heckmann, the world of music archivists and documenters has lost one of its most distinguished personalities. Those of us who had the privilege of working with him have also lost a wise mentor and fatherly friend. Born the son of an art historian and teacher in Dortmund, he studied musicology in Freiburg im Breisgau with Wilibald Gurlitt, among others. In 1952, he completed his doctorate with a dissertation on “Wolfgang Caspar Printz (1641–1717) and his theory of rhythm.” He remained Gurlitt’s assistant until 1954, while working on the renowned Handwörterbuch of musical terminology and lecturing on the history of Lutheran church music and hymnology at the Musikhochschule Freiburg. From f9094e0571ad90329e8e7a02a1623a96034ca76d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: BaMikusi <70342380+BaMikusi@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Thu, 16 Nov 2023 15:28:01 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 2/2] Update 2023-11-16-harald-heckmann-in-memoriam.md --- _posts/en/2023-11/2023-11-16-harald-heckmann-in-memoriam.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/_posts/en/2023-11/2023-11-16-harald-heckmann-in-memoriam.md b/_posts/en/2023-11/2023-11-16-harald-heckmann-in-memoriam.md index 03fe765fc..39398a015 100644 --- a/_posts/en/2023-11/2023-11-16-harald-heckmann-in-memoriam.md +++ b/_posts/en/2023-11/2023-11-16-harald-heckmann-in-memoriam.md @@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ After completing his studies, he gained his first experiences with archival work Heckmann was presumably a founding member of the International Association of Music Libraries, Archives and Documentation Centres (IAML), founded in 1950 under the leadership of Vladimir Fedorov (1901–1979), and at that time usually abbreviated as AIBM after its French name Association Internationale des Bibliothèques Musicales. From 1959 to 1974 he served as Secretary General, then as President until 1977, eventually becoming Honorary President of the association. Even earlier he was involved with the founding of the international documentation projects operating under the auspices of IAML and often mentioned as the “R-Projects”: RILM, RISM, and RIdIM. (RIPM was only added later.) -He was particularly concerned with RISM, serving as its secretary from 1960 and as its president after 1988. Together with his friend, the Mozart scholar Wolfgang Rehm (1929–2017), he succeeded in setting up a second office under the name RISM Zentralredaktion, alongside the original RISM Sécretariat based in Paris. Initially, the new office in Kassel was responsible for the production of the A/I series, including individual prints before 1800. Only in the early 1980s did the Zentralredaktion also take over the A/II series, dedicated to music manuscripts from 1600 to 1800 (but later extended to 1850 and beyond). It was a milestone when, together with Wolfgang Rehm, Heckmann managed to secure funding for the latter project from the Union of the German Academies of Sciences and Humanities. After his retirement in 2004, he also became honorary president of RISM. +He was particularly concerned with RISM, serving as its secretary from 1960 and as its president after 1988. Together with his friend, the Mozart scholar Wolfgang Rehm (1929–2017), he succeeded in setting up a second office under the name RISM Zentralredaktion, alongside the original RISM Sécretariat based in Paris. Initially, the new office in Kassel was responsible for the production of the A/I series, including individual prints before 1800. Only in the early 1980s did the Zentralredaktion also take over the A/II series, dedicated to music manuscripts from 1600 to 1800 (but later extended to 1850 and beyond). It was a milestone when, together with Wolfgang Rehm, Heckmann managed to secure funding for the latter project from the Union of the German Academies of Sciences and Humanities. After his retirement in 2004, he became honorary president also of RISM. A central theme of his work, both professional and voluntary, was the introduction of information technology into music documentation. He was one of those managers who were themselves not closely familiar with such tools (and how could they have been), but nonetheless recognized the vast perspectives they opened up, which we tend to take for granted today. It is thanks to him and his like-minded colleagues, above all Barry S. Brook (1918–1997), that the RISM A/II series came to be conceived in terms of computers from the very beginning, and that publication in book format was ruled out – even though at the time no one could have a clear idea about how the database might be published later.