Results for 'Absolute Music'

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  1.  15
    Absolute Music: The History of an Idea.Mark Evan Bonds - 2014 - New York: Oup Usa.
    In Absolute Music: The History of an Idea, author Mark Evan Bonds examines how writers have struggled to isolate the essence of music in ways that account for its profound effects on the human spirit. By carefully tracing the evolution of absolute music from Ancient Greece through the Middle Ages to twentieth-century America, Bonds provides the first comprehensive history of this pivotal concept, and provokes new thoughts on the essence of music and how this (...)
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  2.  63
    Absolute music and the construction of meaning.Daniel K. L. Chua - 1999 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This book is born out of two contradictions: first, it explores the making of meaning in a musical form that was made to lose its meaning at the turn of the nineteenth century; secondly, it is a history of a music that claims to have no history - absolute music. The book therefore writes against that notion of absolute music which tends to be the paradigm for most musicological and analytical studies. It is concerned not (...)
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  3.  33
    Absolute Music, Mechanical Reproduction.Arved Mark Ashby - 2010 - University of California Press.
    The recorded musical text -- Recording, repetition, and meaning in absolute music -- Schnabel's rationalism, Gould's pragmatism -- Digital mythologies -- Beethoven and the iPod Nation -- Photo/phono/pornography -- Mahler as imagist.
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  4.  22
    Absolute Music as Ontology or Experience.Tamara Levitz - 2017 - British Journal of Aesthetics 57 (1):81-84.
    In Absolute Music: The History of an Idea, Mark Evan Bonds presents a magisterial history of absolute music—a term Richard Wagner first coined in 1846, and yet which Bonds believes existed as an ‘idea’ going all the way back to Ancient Greece. Drawing primarily on the work of new musicologists in the United States in the 1980s as his point of departure, Bonds defines absolute music as a ‘regulative concept’ that allows him to discuss (...)
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  5. Absolute music.Thomas Grey - 2014 - In Stephen C. Downes (ed.), Aesthetics of Music: Musicological Perspectives. New York: Routledge.
     
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  6.  74
    The idea of absolute music.Carl Dahlhaus - 1989 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    With a characteristically broad and provocative treatment, Dahlhaus examines a single music-aesthetical idea from various historical and philosophical viewpoints. "Essential reading for anyone interested in the larger intellectual framework in which Romantic music found its place, a framework that to a remarkable degree has continued to shape our image of music."--Robert P. Morgan, Yale University Carl Dahlhaus (1928-1989) is the author of a highly influential body of works on the foundations of music history and aesthetics.
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  7.  30
    Kivy’s Mystery: Absolute Music and What the Formalist Can (or Could) Hear.Garry L. Hagberg - forthcoming - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism.
    Peter Kivy has said that the power of purely instrumental music remains an unexplained wonder. With this larger question in mind, I will consider: the issues in musical aesthetics that led to what Kivy termed his enhanced formalism, his conception of expressive properties in music and how a distinction between having and understanding an emotion can help clarify this issues here, and, most importantly for Kivy’s larger mystery, the way that counterpoint, in an often unrecognized way, can present (...)
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  8.  27
    Two Debates about Absolute Music.Hannah Ginsborg - 2017 - British Journal of Aesthetics 57 (1):77-80.
    Mark Evan Bonds makes a distinction between two concepts of absolute music: as repertory, and as ‘regulative concept’. This paper explores the distinction, and distinguishes further two debates associated with these two concepts: one about the value of absolute music in the repertory sense, the other about the extent to which music is ‘absolute’ in the sense of lacking expressive or representational content. It ends with a proposal about how reflection on the first debate (...)
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  9.  34
    Finding Content in Absolute Music.Andrew Huddleston - manuscript
    It has sometimes been held that instrumental music on its own, without text or program, is a kind of ‘pure’ or ‘absolutemusic, having no significant truck with extra-musical reality. While bird calls and canon shots might get countenanced, nothing in the vein of a philosophical worldview, a rich narrative, or a socio-political subtext is going to make the formalist’s strict cut. There has been considerable discussion in the analytic aesthetics of music about these issues and (...)
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  10.  26
    Absolute Music, Mechanical Reproduction by ashby, arved. [REVIEW]Jennifer Judkins - 2011 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 69 (3):345-346.
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  11.  26
    Heidegger's absolute music, or what are poets for when the end of metaphysics is at hand?John Lysaker - 2000 - Research in Phenomenology 30 (1):180-210.
  12.  22
    Bonds, mark Evan. Absolute music: The history of an idea. Oxford university press, 2014, XIII + 375 pp., $35.00 cloth. [REVIEW]James O. Young - 2015 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 73 (2):207-208.
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  13.  1
    9. The Curse and Promise of the Absolutely Musical: Tristan und Isolde and Don Giovanni.Lydia Goehr - 2006 - In Lydia Goehr & Daniel Herwitz (eds.), The Don Giovanni Moment: Essays on the Legacy of an Opera. Columbia University Press. pp. 137-160.
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  14.  13
    Absolute Programme Music.Dammann Guy - 2017 - British Journal of Aesthetics 57 (1):71-75.
    Mark Evan Bonds’ recent book, Absolute Music, deepens considerably the historical context within which Eduard Hanslick’s famous treatise on musical beauty can be read. This paper argues that, with the aid of this expanded context, we can understand Hanslick’s treatise to have provided contemporary and subsequent audiences with a kind of meta-programme for listening to symphonic and other non-texted music. That is to say, Hanslick’s text arguably informed and directed the way audiences came to listen to instrumental (...)
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  15.  8
    Programming the Absolute: Nineteenth-Century German Music and the Hermeneutics of the Moment.Berthold Hoeckner - 2002 - Princeton University Press.
    It is a wonderful, often beautiful book."--Brian Hyer, University of Wisconsin-Madison "This is an important book that many in music will profit from confronting. It is a performative work, embodying and recreating what it wishes to argue.
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  16.  54
    Yet Again, ‘Between Absolute and Programme Music’.Gregory Karl & Jenefer Robinson - 2015 - British Journal of Aesthetics 55 (1):19-37.
    In this paper, we contest Peter Kivy’s claim that there is a clear opposition between ‘absolute music’ and programme music and between musical form and musical expressiveness. We argue, on the contrary, that much music falls somewhere between absolute and programme music as Kivy conceives the categories, and that such music is often primarily organized not on purely formal principles but by means of the overall ‘expressive trajectory’ or ‘poetic idea’ of the piece. (...)
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  17.  87
    Online Recognition of Music Is Influenced by Relative and Absolute Pitch Information.Sarah C. Creel & Melanie A. Tumlin - 2012 - Cognitive Science 36 (2):224-260.
    Three experiments explored online recognition in a nonspeech domain, using a novel experimental paradigm. Adults learned to associate abstract shapes with particular melodies, and at test they identified a played melody’s associated shape. To implicitly measure recognition, visual fixations to the associated shape versus a distractor shape were measured as the melody played. Degree of similarity between associated melodies was varied to assess what types of pitch information adults use in recognition. Fixation and error data suggest that adults naturally recognize (...)
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  18.  13
    Imagination, music, and the emotions: a philosophical study.Saam Trivedi - 2017 - Albany, NY: SUNY Press.
    Articulates an imaginationist solution to the question of how purely instrumental music can be perceived by a listener as having emotional content. Both musicians and laypersons can perceive purely instrumental music without words or an associated story or program as expressing emotions such as happiness and sadness. But how? In this book, Saam Trivedi discusses and critiques the leading philosophical approaches to this question, including formalism, metaphorism, expression theories, arousalism, resemblance theories, and persona theories. Finding these to be (...)
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  19. Programming the Absolute. Nineteenth Century German Music and the Hermeneutics of the Moment. By Berthold Hoeckner.K. Skyllstad - 2004 - The European Legacy 9 (2):267-267.
     
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  20. A Música Em Schelling E O Ritmo Universal Do Absoluto: Music And The Universal Rhythm Of Absolute In Schelling’s Work.Evelyn G. Petersen de Barros - 2011 - Griot 4 (2):44-59.
    O presente artigo visa problematizar a concepção de música proposta pelo filósofo Friedrich Schelling em sua obra ‘Filosofia da Arte’, na qual essa forma artística é concebida enquanto uma potência real do Absoluto. Desse modo, pretende-se apontar para o caráter inovador e peculiar da concepção schelliniana em contraste com a noção romântica de música absoluta, assim como situá-la dentro do panorama geral do sistema de identidades desenvolvido pelo autor. -/- This article aims to discuss the musical conception proposed by German (...)
     
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  21. Explaining musical experience.Paul Boghossian - 2007 - In Kathleen Stock (ed.), Philosophers on music: experience, meaning, and work. Oxford University Press.
    I start with the observation that we often respond to a musical performance with emotion -- even if it is just the performance of a piece of absolute music, unaccompanied by text, title or programme. We can be exhilarated after a Rossini overture brought off with subtlety and panache; somber and melancholy after Furtlanger’s performance of the slow movement of the Eroica. And so forth. These emotions feel like the real thing to me – or anyway very close (...)
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  22. Musical Profundity: Wittgenstein's Paradigm Shift.Eran Guter - 2019 - Apeiron. Estudios de Filosofia 10:41-58.
    The current debate concerning musical profundity was instigated, and set up by Peter Kivy in his book Music Alone (1990) as part of his comprehensive defense of enhanced formalism, a position he championed vigorously throughout his entire career. Kivy’s view of music led him to maintain utter skepticism regarding musical profundity. The scholarly debate that ensued centers on the question whether or not (at least some) music can be profound. In this study I would like to take (...)
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  23.  22
    Kant’s “Theory of Music”.Oliver Thorndike - 2021 - Con-Textos Kantianos 14:416-438.
    One thing to expect from a theory of absolute music is that it explains what makes it so significant to us. Kant rightly observes that the essence of absolute music is our affective response to it. Yet none of the standard 18 th century theories, arousal theory and aesthetic rationalism, can explain both the universality of a judgment of taste and its subjective emotional content. The paper argues that Kant’s own aesthetic theory of aesthetic ideas is (...)
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  24.  13
    Musical Quotations and Shostakovich’s Secret: A Response to Kivy.Kalle Puolakka - 2017 - British Journal of Aesthetics 57 (1):37-50.
    Peter Kivy has argued that scholars of the music of Dimitri Shostakovich are misguided when they make interpretations that attribute complex extra-musical content to works of his that bear no indications of such content, such as a title or an explicitly announced programme. Upon Kivy’s account, such works should rather be approached in terms of absolute music. In this paper, I show some decisive weaknesses in this critique. Drawing on the relevant philosophical literature, I examine Shostakovich’s use (...)
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  25. Absolute Pitch and Tone Identification.Gilead Bar-Elli - 2016 - Contemporary Aesthetics 14.
    Absolute pitch, besides the psychological and neurological interests it has, raises some conceptual difficulties that can teach us about the richness of our notion of musical tone and various aspects of its identification. It is argued that when AP is conceived under a slim notion of identifying the pitch of a crude sound, it is hardly meaningful and has no significance in music comprehension. The rich notion, which is the meaningful and important one, involves knowing the position of (...)
     
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  26.  10
    Musical Jabberwocky? [REVIEW]Timothy Justus - 2002 - Trends in Cognitive Sciences 6:144–145.
    In this book review essay, Justus discusses Virtual Music: Computer Synthesis of Musical Style (2001) by David Cope. The review begins by drawing a parallel between the Turing Test and evaluating the compositions of Cope’s Experiments in Musical Intelligence (EMI) before providing an overview of how this computer programme works and the commentaries included in the book (by Douglas Hofstadter, Eleanor Selfridge-Field, Bernard Greenberg, Steve Larson, Jonathan Berger, and Daniel Dennett). The essay then raises questions of absolute (...) versus music with referential meaning, asking whether EMI’s compositions represent a sort of “musical Jabberwocky” (in reference to Lewis Carroll’s 1871 poem) in which syntax and semantics have become dissociated. (shrink)
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  27.  80
    Vague Music.Roy Sorensen - 2011 - Philosophy 86 (2):231-248.
    Is listening to music like looking through a kaleidoscope? Formalists contend that music is meaningless. Most music theorists concede that this austere thesis is surprisingly close to the truth. Nevertheless, they refute formalism with a little band of diffusely referential phenomena, such as musical quotation, onomatopoeia, exemplification, and leitmotifs. These curiosities ought to be pressed into a new campaign against assumptions that vagueness can only arise in the semantically lush setting of language. Just as the discovery of (...)
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  28. Explaining musical experience.Paul Boghossian - 2007 - In Kathleen Stock (ed.), Philosophers on Music: Experience, Meaning, and Work. Oxford University Press. pp. 117.
    I start with the observation that we often respond to a musical performance with emotion -- even if it is just the performance of a piece of absolute music, unaccompanied by text, title or programme. We can be exhilarated after a Rossini overture brought off with subtlety and panache; somber and melancholy after Furtlanger’s performance of the slow movement of the Eroica. And so forth. These emotions feel like the real thing to me – or anyway very close (...)
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  29. Music, Geometry, and the Listener: Space in The History of Western Philosophy and Western Classical Music.M. Buck - unknown
    This thesis is directed towards a philosophy of music by attention to conceptions and perceptions of space. I focus on melody and harmony, and do not emphasise rhythm, which, as far as I can tell, concerns time rather than space. I seek a metaphysical account of Western Classical music in the diatonic tradition. More specifically, my interest is in wordless, untitled music, often called 'absolute' music. My aim is to elucidate a spatial approach to the (...)
     
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  30.  26
    Antithetical Arts: On the Ancient Quarrel Between Literature and Music.Peter Kivy - 2009 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press.
    Peter Kivy presents a fascinating critical examination of the two rival ways of understanding instrumental music. He argues against 'literary' interpretation in terms of representational or narrative content, and defends musical formalism. Along the way he discusses interpretations of a range of works in the canon of absolute music.
  31.  25
    Absolute Imagination: the Metaphysics of Romanticism.Gregory S. Moss - 2019 - Social Imaginaries 5 (1):57-80.
    Carnap famously argued that metaphysics unavoidably involves a confusion between science and poetry. Unlike the lyric poet, who does not attempt to make an argument, the metaphysician attempts to make an argument while simultaneously lacking in musical talent. Carnap’s objection that metaphysics unavoidably involves a blend of philosophy and poetry is not a 20th century insight. Plato, in his beautifully crafted Phaedo, presents us with the imprisoned Socrates, who having been condemned to death for practicing philosophy in the Apology, has (...)
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  32. Music, mind, and morality: Arousing the body politic.Philip Alperson & Noël Carroll - 2008 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 42 (1):1-15.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Music, Mind, and Morality:Arousing the Body PoliticPhilip Alperson (bio) and Noël Carroll (bio)I. IntroductionIf like Aristotle one agrees that the responsibility of philosophy is to offer as comprehensive a picture of phenomena as possible, then one must admit that sometimes the methods and goals of analytic philosophy stand in the way of getting the job done properly; they may even distort one's findings. This is not said in (...)
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  33.  66
    Learning Music: Embodied Experience in the Life-World.Eva Alerby & Cecilia Ferm - 2005 - Philosophy of Music Education Review 13 (2):177-185.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Learning Music:Embodied Experience in the Life-WorldEva Alerby and Cecilia FermIn the present age, which is often signified as post-modern or knowledge-intensive, the calls for learning echo loud. Discussions of learning, as well as teaching, permeate almost all levels and arenas of our society, and have a sure place in every-day conversation as well as scientific debate. The concept of learning can be understood and explained in many different (...)
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  34.  23
    Musical Aphorisms and Common Aesthetic Quandaries.Yaroslav Senyshyn - 2003 - Philosophy of Music Education Review 11 (2):112-129.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Philosophy of Music Education Review 11.2 (2003) 112-129 [Access article in PDF] Musical Aphorisms and Common Aesthetic Quandaries Yaroslav Senyshyn Simon Fraser University, Canada I have written in the style of aphorisms because their form is useful for both the sake of brevity and possible complexity. As well, they are historically significant as they have served many philosophers in the past and in our own time. Some will (...)
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  35.  8
    The acoustic self in English modernism and beyond: writing musically.Zoltan Varga - 2022 - New York: Routledge.
    Drawing on the analogy between musical meaning-making and human subjectivity, this book develops the concept of the acoustic self, exploring the ways in which musical characterization and structure are related to issues of subject-representation in the modernist English novel. The volume is framed around three musical topics-the fugue, absolute music, and Gesamtkunstwerk-arguing that these three modes of musicalization address modernist dilemmas around selfhood and identity. Varga reflects on the manifestations of the acoustic self in examples from the works (...)
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  36.  26
    Musical Aphorisms and Common Aesthetic Quandaries.Yaroslav Senyshyn - 2003 - Philosophy of Music Education Review 11 (2):112-129.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Philosophy of Music Education Review 11.2 (2003) 112-129 [Access article in PDF] Musical Aphorisms and Common Aesthetic Quandaries Yaroslav Senyshyn Simon Fraser University, Canada I have written in the style of aphorisms because their form is useful for both the sake of brevity and possible complexity. As well, they are historically significant as they have served many philosophers in the past and in our own time. Some will (...)
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  37.  35
    Learning Music: Embodied Experience in the Life-World.Eva Alerby & Cecilia Ferm - 2005 - Philosophy of Music Education Review 13 (2):177-185.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Learning Music:Embodied Experience in the Life-WorldEva Alerby and Cecilia FermIn the present age, which is often signified as post-modern or knowledge-intensive, the calls for learning echo loud. Discussions of learning, as well as teaching, permeate almost all levels and arenas of our society, and have a sure place in every-day conversation as well as scientific debate. The concept of learning can be understood and explained in many different (...)
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  38. The Music and Thought of Michael Tippett: Modern Times and Metaphysics.David Clarke - 2001 - Cambridge University Press.
    Tippett is often cast as a composer with a strong visionary streak, but what does that mean for a twentieth-century artist? In this multi-faceted study, David Clarke explores Tippett's complex creative imagination - its dialogue between a romantic's aspirations to the ideal and absolute, and a modernist's sceptical realism. He shows how the musical formations of works such as The Midsummer Marriage, King Priam, and The Vision of Saint Augustine resonate with the aesthetic and theoretical ideas of key figures (...)
     
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  39.  86
    Another go at musical profundity: Stephen Davies and the game of chess.Peter Kivy - 2003 - British Journal of Aesthetics 43 (4):401-411.
    I have argued previously that the art of absolute music, unlike, for example, the art of literature, is not capable of profundity, which I characterized as treating a profound subject matter, at the highest artistic level, in a manner appropriate to its profundity. Stephen Davies has recently argued that there is another way of being profound, which he calls non-propositional profundity, and for which chess provides his principal example. He argues, further, that absolute music also exhibits (...)
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  40. The crisis of musical aesthetics in the 21st century.Gianmario Borio - 2009 - Topoi 28 (2):109-117.
    This essay is an attempt to understand the reasons for the current crisis of musical aesthetics. It examines the function of this discipline as the mediator between philosophy and musicology, it inquires into its connections with the ideals of autonomy, beauty and free subjectivity. During the 20th Century, major changes in society and their communication forms happened; anthropology and semiotics began to compete with aesthetics in explaining musical facts. The last paragraphs test the chances of resistance of musical aesthetics ; (...)
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  41.  23
    The "Magic" of Music: Archaic Dreams in Romantic Aesthetics and an Education in Aesthetics.Alexandra Kertz-Welzel - 2005 - Philosophy of Music Education Review 13 (1):77-94.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The “Magic” of Music:Archaic Dreams in Romantic Aesthetics and an Education in AestheticsAlexandra Kertz-WelzelO, then I close my eyes to all the strife of the world—and withdraw quietly into the land of music, as into the land of belief, where all our doubts and our sufferings are lost in a resounding sea....1Music serves many different functions in human life, accompanying everyday activities such as working, shopping, or (...)
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  42.  23
    Absolute Pitch and Exquisite Rightness of Tone.Paul Standish - 2016 - Philosophy and Literature 40 (1):226-239.
    Wittgenstein was apparently looking for someone else. It was because he had not been successful that he had knocked at the Leavises’ door, to bide his time there before he looked again. On entering the house, he immediately peered through the window into the street. Yet after a moment he turned and said abruptly: “You’ve got a gramophone, I see—I don’t suppose you’ve anything worth playing.” And “Then,” so Leavis continues the description,with a marked change of tone, he exclaimed “Ah!”: (...)
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  43.  20
    Social Werktreue and the musical work's independent afterlife.Roger W. H. Savage - 2004 - The European Legacy 9 (4):515-524.
    New musicology's rejection of formalist precepts eclipses how the subjectivization of aesthetics institutes the schema of music's opposition to reality. Social Werktreue—fidelity to the work and to the faithful reproduction of an original intent—replaces ideals of aesthetic transcendence with analyses of a work's socially constructed meaning. Hence, absolute music's social demystification positions music criticism within a system of oppositions ratified by bourgeois culture. The power individual works exercise in contesting reality deconstructs formalist dogma and social Werktreue. (...)
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  44.  8
    The?Magic? Of Music: Archaic Dreams in Romantic Aesthetics and an Education in Aesthetics.Alexandra Kertz-Welzel - 2005 - Philosophy of Music Education Review 13 (1):77-94.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The “Magic” of Music:Archaic Dreams in Romantic Aesthetics and an Education in AestheticsAlexandra Kertz-WelzelO, then I close my eyes to all the strife of the world—and withdraw quietly into the land of music, as into the land of belief, where all our doubts and our sufferings are lost in a resounding sea....1Music serves many different functions in human life, accompanying everyday activities such as working, shopping, or (...)
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  45.  22
    Music for the Doge in Early Renaissance Venice.Julie E. Cumming - 1992 - Speculum 67 (2):324-364.
    The Venetian state has aptly been called a work of art. So absolute and necessary appear its fictions that continuity and tradition are always in the foreground, while change recedes to the distant horizon. It is this quality of timeless truth that characterizes the “myth of Venice”: Venice remains perfect and unchanged while other governments rise and fall. It remains unchanged because of two things: the “perfect” system of government, combining the best features of monarchy, oligarchy, and democracy; and (...)
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  46. Mad Speculation and Absolute Inhumanism: Lovecraft, Ligotti, and the Weirding of Philosophy.Ben Woodard - 2011 - Continent 1 (1):3-13.
    continent. 1.1 : 3-13. / 0/ – Introduction I want to propose, as a trajectory into the philosophically weird, an absurd theoretical claim and pursue it, or perhaps more accurately, construct it as I point to it, collecting the ground work behind me like the Perpetual Train from China Mieville's Iron Council which puts down track as it moves reclaiming it along the way. The strange trajectory is the following: Kant's critical philosophy and much of continental philosophy which has followed, (...)
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  47.  51
    The historicity of music in Hegel in face of Schoenberg’s twelve-tone music.Adriano Bueno Kurle - 2019 - Veritas – Revista de Filosofia da Pucrs 64 (2):e33169.
    In this paper, I consider how it would be possible to think about the historicity of music through Hegel’s thought. I will compare Hegel’s idea with a historical event that is considered relevant in the history of music: Schoenberg’s twelve-tone music, taken here also as a model of immanent negation and Aufhebung of tonal system in music. Furthermore, I will take Schoenberg’s twelve-tone music as an instance and wonder about the role of music and (...)
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  48.  7
    Brahms and Bruckner as artistic antipodes: studies in musical semantics.Constantin Floros - 2015 - Frankfurt am Main: PL Academic Research. Edited by Ernest Bernhardt-Kabisch.
    Part one. Brahms and Bruckner : a radical historical, art-theoretical, and artistic contrast. Aspects and issues ; Art and personality ; The conflict ; Art-theoretical controversies ; On historical classification ; Parallelisms and antitheses ; The relation to historicism ; "Heirs" of Beethoven ; Parallelisms and antitheses once more ; Richard Wagner -- Part two. The unknown Brahms. Brahms : an autonomous composer? ; "Young Kreisler" ; Schumann's essay "Neue Bahnen" : a new interpretation ; Schumann and Brahms : Brahms' (...)
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  49.  1
    Eye hEar the visual in music.Simon Shaw-Miller - 2013 - Burlington, VT: Ashgate.
    'Eye hEar The Visual in Music' employs the concept of the visual in proximate relation to music, producing a tension: 'is it not the case that there is a gulf between painting and music, between the visible and the audible? One is full of colour and light yet silent; one is invisible and marvellously noisy.' Such a belief, this book argues, betrays an ideological constraint on music, desiccating it to sound, and art to vision. The starting (...)
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  50.  58
    On the religious foundations of A.F. Losev's philosophy of music.Konstantin V. Zenkin - 2004 - Studies in East European Thought 56 (2-3):161-172.
    The article considers A.F. Losev''s philosophy of music in the context ofhis entire religious worldview and as the part of hisChristian-Neoplatonic philosophy. Synthesizing Pythagorean-Platonic andRomantic musical doctrines, Losev concludes: music is the expression ofthe life of numbers, a meonic-hyletic element that rages inside numericconstructions. So it is necessary to analyse the concept of number inthe system of Neoplatonic thought. In the Neoplatonic hierarchy of theuniverse both numeric sphere and music are located at the source of allthe eidei, (...)
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