Results for 'Sonic art'

996 found
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  1. Sonic art and the nature of sonic events.David Roden - 2010 - Review of Philosophy and Psychology 1 (1):141-156.
    Musicians and theorists such as the radiophonic pioneer Pierre Schaeffer, view the products of new audio technologies as devices whereby the experience of sound can be displaced from its causal origins and achieve new musical or poetic resonances. Accordingly, the listening experience associated with sonic art within this perspective is ‘acousmatic’; the process of sound generation playing no role in the description or understanding of the experience as such. In this paper I shall articulate and defend a position according (...)
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  2.  31
    The Sonic Art of Film and the Sonic Arts in Film.John Dyck - 2019 - In Noël Carroll, Laura T. Di Summa & Shawn Loht (eds.), The Palgrave Handbook of the Philosophy of Film and Motion Pictures. Springer. pp. 801-821.
    My goal in this chapter is threefold. First, I argue that film is, at least partly, an art of sound. Most films are not made merely to be seen; they are also made to be heard. This offers an alternative to traditional accounts of film, which take film to be an essentially visual artform, and it suggests new directions for research in philosophy of film. Second, I argue that there are several distinct arts of sound in film. Some of these (...)
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  3.  18
    A Transmaterial Approach to Walking Methodologies: Embodiment, Affect, and a Sonic Art Performance.Sarah E. Truman & Stephanie Springgay - 2017 - Body and Society 23 (4):27-58.
    Bodily methodologies that engage with the affective, rhythmic, and temporal dimensions of movement have altered the landscape of social science and humanities research. Walking is one such methodology by which scholars have examined vital, sensory, material, and ephemeral intensities beyond the logics of representation. Extending this rich field, this article invokes the concept trans to reconceptualize walking research through theories that attend to the vitality and agency of matter, the interconnectedness between humans and non-humans, the importance of mediation and bodily (...)
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  4. Music and electro-sonic art.Gordon Graham - 2007 - In Kathleen Stock (ed.), Philosophers on Music: Experience, Meaning, and Work. New York: Oxford University Press UK.
     
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  5.  13
    The body in sound, music and performance: studies in audio and sonic arts.Linda O'Keeffe & Isabel Nogueira (eds.) - 2022 - New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
    The Body in Sound, Music and Performance brings together cutting-edge contributions from women working on and researching contemporary sound practice. This highly interdisciplinary book features a host of international contributors and places emphasis on developments beyond the western world, including movements growing across Latin America. Within the book, the body is situated as both the site and centre for knowledge making and creative production. Chapters explore how insightful theoretical analysis, new methods, innovative practises, and sometimes within the socio-cultural conditions of (...)
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  6.  10
    Sonic flux: sound, art, and metaphysics.Christoph Cox - 2018 - London: University of Chicago Press.
    From Edison’s invention of the phonograph through contemporary field recording and sound installation, artists have become attracted to those domains against which music has always defined itself: noise, silence, and environmental sound. Christoph Cox argues that these developments in the sonic arts are not only aesthetically but also philosophically significant, revealing sound to be a continuous material flow to which human expressions contribute but which precedes and exceeds those expressions. Cox shows how, over the course of the twentieth and (...)
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  7. Gendered Sounds, Spaces and Places. Deep Situated Listening Among Hearing Heads and Affective Bodies / Sanne Krogh Groth ; The Field is Mined and Full of “Minas”- Women's Music in Paraíba : Kalyne Lima and Sinta A Liga Crew / Tânia Mello Neiva ; Working with Womens Work : Towards the embodied curator / Irene Revell ; Tejucupapo Women : Sound Mangrove and Performance Creation / Luciana Lyra ; New Methodologies in Sound Art and Performance Practice ; Looking for Silence in the Body / Ida Mara Freire ; OUR body in #sonicwilderness & #soundasgrowing / Antye Greie (AGF/poemproducer) ; What makes the Wolves Howl Under the Moon? Sound Poetics of Territory-Spirit-Bodies for Well-Living / Laila Rosa & Adriana Gabriela Santos Teixeira ; Dispatches: Cartographing and Sharing Listenings / Lílian Campesato and Valéria Bonafé ; Applying Feminist Methodologies in the Sonic Arts : Listening To Brazilian Women Talk about Sound.Linda O. Keeffe & Isabel Nogueira - 2022 - In Linda O'Keeffe & Isabel Nogueira (eds.), The body in sound, music and performance: studies in audio and sonic arts. New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
     
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  8. New issues. Music and electro-sonic art / Gordon Graham ; Thoughts on rhythm.Roger Scruton - 2007 - In Kathleen Stock (ed.), Philosophers on Music: Experience, Meaning, and Work. New York: Oxford University Press UK.
     
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  9. Sonic obstacles and conceptual nostalgia: preliminary considerations on musical conceptualism and contemporary art.Iain Campbell - 2021 - Philosophical Inquiries 9 (2):111-132.
    This paper is concerned with the aesthetic and discursive gap between music and contemporary art, and the recent attempts to remedy this in the field of New Music through a notion of “New Conceptualism.” It examines why, despite musical sources being central to the emergence of conceptual artistic strategies in the 1950s and ’60s, the worlds of an increasingly transmedial “generic art” and music have remained largely distinct. While it takes New Music’s New Conceptualism as its focus, it argues that (...)
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  10.  7
    Sonic Decay.Ezra Teboul & Sparkles Stanford - 2015 - International Journal of Žižek Studies 9 (1).
    The authors discuss sonic decay as a compositional, performative and installation practice. Building off of the recording of a six hour performance, Andrew Stanford and Ezra Teboul assembled a short eight minute audio response which comes in two separate files. In addition to online links to the pieces, this paper provides a description of the compositional process along with an analysis of the response’s content and format. It then relates those to the greater concepts of sonic materialism, sound (...)
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  11. Sonic Pictures.Jason P. Leddington - 2021 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 79 (3):354-365.
    Winning essay of the American Society for Aesthetics' inaugural Peter Kivy Prize. Extends Kivy's notion of sonic picturing through engagement with recent work in philosophy of perception. Argues that sonic pictures are more widespread and more aesthetically and artistically important than even Kivy envisioned. Topics discussed include: the nature of sonic pictures; the nature of sounds; what we can (and more importantly, cannot) conclude from musical listening; sonic pictures in film; beatboxing as an art of (...) picturing; and cover songs as sonic pictures. To be published in the Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism. (shrink)
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  12.  16
    Sonic possible worlds: hearing the continuum of sound.Salomé Voegelin - 2014 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    From its use in literary theory, film criticism and the discourse of games design, Salomé Voegelin expands 'possible world theory' to think the worlding of sound in music, in art and in the everyday. The modal logic of possible worlds, articulated principally via David K. Lewis and developed through Maurice Merleau-Ponty's phenomenological life-worlds, creates a view on the invisible slices of the world and reflects on how to make them count, politically and aesthetically. How to make them thinkable and accessible (...)
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  13.  15
    Abstract Time and Affective Perception in the Sonic Work of Art.Eleni Ikoniadou - 2014 - Body and Society 20 (3-4):140-161.
    The purpose of this article is to explore the concept of rhythm as enabling relations and thus as an appropriate mode of analysis for digital sound art installation. In particular, the article argues for a rhythmanalysis of the sonic event as a ‘vibrating sensation’ (Deleuze and Guattari) that incorporates the virtual without necessarily actualizing it. Picking up on notions such as rhythm, time, affect, and event, particularly through their discussion in relation to Susanne Langer’s work, I argue for the (...)
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  14.  25
    Eleni IKONIADOU, The Rhythmic Event. Art, Media, and the Sonic.Paola Crespi - forthcoming - Rhuthmos.
    This review has already been published in Theory, Culture and Society, June 17, 2015. We gratefully thank Paola Crespi for the permission to reproduce it. Eleni IKONIADOU, The Rhythmic Event. Art, Media, and the Sonic, Cambridge, MIT Press, 2014, 117 pages. A much-needed contribution to the field of media philosophy, sound and digital studies, this book is petit and extremely dense. Part of Brian Massumi and Erin Manning's Technologies of Livedion series with MIT Press, - Recensions.
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  15. The Sonic Effect: Aurality and Digital Networks in Exurbia.David Cecchetto - 2013 - Evental Aesthetics 2 (2):34-62.
    This essay examines the problem of medial specificity in music and sound art, giving particular attention to Seth Kim-Cohen’s call for a non-cochlear sound art based on the notion of “expansion” that has been decisive in visual arts discourses. I argue that Kim-Cohen’s non-cochlear intervention in In the Blink of an Ear might be productively pressured towards the concept of a “sonic effect” that acknowledges the material-discursive particularity of sound without recourse to the phenomenological claims of authenticity that Kim-Cohen (...)
     
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  16.  17
    Sonic Metaphors: Music, Sound, and Ecofeminist Theology.Elizabeth Ursic - 2021 - Feminist Theology 29 (3):247-263.
    This article explores the relationship between music and ecofeminist theology and investigates how music and sound can advance the development of ecofeminist thought. On a physical level, the act of breathing connects humankind with the earth’s atmosphere and the element of air produces music and sound. On a theological level, traditional church teachings about the power and danger of music have reflected similar warnings about women and nature. Ecofeminist theologian Sally McFague made a persuasive case for metaphorical theology that supported (...)
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  17.  13
    Cox, Christoph. Sonic Flux: Sound, Art, and Metaphysics. University of Chicago Press, 2018, viii + 272 pp., 41 b&w illus., $100.00 cloth. [REVIEW]Wesley D. Cray - 2020 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 78 (1):126-129.
    The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, Volume 78, Issue 1, Page 126-129, Winter 2020.
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  18.  10
    Sonic Becomings: Rhythmic Encounters in Interspecies Improvisation.Louisa Collenberg - 2021 - Open Philosophy 4 (1):224-230.
    David Rothenberg, a philosophy professor and Jazz musician, has been improvising with nonhuman animals for years, among his playing partners are birds and whales, known to be territorial animals. As Deleuze and Guattari propose that the origin of art is precisely the territorialising animal and more a function of nature than a specifically human cultural achievement, their concept of territory and rhythm offers a non-anthropocentric way of looking at these encounters. Rothenberg’s sonic experiments in resonance and interspecies interaction do (...)
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  19.  9
    Cox, Christoph. Sonic Flux: Sound, Art, and Metaphysics. University of Chicago Press, 2018, viii + 272 pp., 41 b&w illus., $100.00 cloth. [REVIEW]Wesley D. Cray - 2020 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 78 (1):126-129.
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  20. Sonic subjectivities.Ruth Herbert - 2017 - In Marcel Cobussen, Vincent Meelberg & Barry Truax (eds.), The Routledge companion to sounding art. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge.
     
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  21.  11
    SOUNDS OF DISASTER: sonic encounters with blanchot.Adam Potts - 2018 - Angelaki 23 (3):1-2.
    This paper aims to establish a distinction and relationship between two types of noise – active noise and passive noise – while giving emphasis to the latter. Active noise is the discourse of negativity and violence that some theorists associate with noise’s materiality, an association particularly pronounced in engagements with Japanoise. The problem with this discourse is that it relies on a culturally normative understanding of noise as well as novelty. This narrative inevitably leads to a dead end. Noise, and (...)
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  22. Sonic histories.Vincent Meelberg - 2017 - In Marcel Cobussen, Vincent Meelberg & Barry Truax (eds.), The Routledge companion to sounding art. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge.
     
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  23.  32
    Paulista: A networked translocal sonic performance between São Paulo and Belfast.Felipe Hickmann & Rui Chaves - 2012 - Technoetic Arts 10 (2-3):319-327.
    First performed in June 2011, Paulista used fixed and mobile streaming technology to create a translocal, musical and sonic performance linking SARC (Belfast/Northern Ireland), LAMI (São Paulo/Brazil) and Paulista Avenue, in the heart of São Paulo’s city centre. By discussing the performative and compositional strategies employed in this work, we aim at highlighting the central role played by the network in articulating notions of liveness and dramaturgy, as well as fostering new ideas and processes to engage dislocated spaces in (...)
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  24.  16
    Fathom: A sonic surface bordering underwater and acoustic worlds.Jane Grant, John Matthias & Simon Honywill - 2014 - Technoetic Arts 12 (1):5-14.
    Fathom is a sound installation by Jane Grant and John Matthias, which was commissioned by the River Tamar Project and was premiered at the Factory Cooperage Building in Royal William Yard, Plymouth, UK in September 2013. Visitors entering the installation were able to hear live and edited sound recorded underwater in Plymouth Sound, a large estuarine body of water from which the Plym, Tamar and Hamaoze Rivers flow into the sea. Six-step ladders in the centre of the installation space surrounded (...)
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  25.  9
    Energies in the arts.Douglas Kahn (ed.) - 2019 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press.
    Investigating the concepts and material realities of energy coursing through the arts: a foundational text. This book investigates energies—in the plural, the energies embedded and embodied in everything under the sun— as they are expressed in the arts. With contributions from scholars and critics from the visual arts, art history, anthropology, music, literature, and the history of science, it offers the first multidisciplinary investigation of the concepts and material realities of energy coursing through the arts. Just as Douglas Kahn's earlier (...)
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  26.  4
    White musical mythologies: sonic presence in modernism.Edmund Mendelssohn - 2023 - Stanford, California: Stanford University Press.
    Examining a series of modernist thinkers and composers who engaged with non-European cultures as they pursued pure sound as a privileged presence, White Musical Mythologies pairs Erik Satie with Bergson, Edgard Varèse with Bataille, Pierre Boulez with Artaud, and John Cage with Derrida to offer an ambitious intellectual history of the colonial roots of modernist musical thought. Each of the musicians studied in this book re-created or appropriated non-European forms of expression as they conceived music ontologically, often thinking music as (...)
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  27.  29
    Extraterrestrial contact: Creating xenolinguistic sonic messages for extraterrestrial communication – Ether Ship electronic music orchestrations in the Anza-Borrego Desert.Willard Van De Bogart - 2014 - Technoetic Arts 12 (1):47-73.
    Communication with other life forms in our universe has been an ongoing effort most notably conducted by the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence Project (SETI). Whereas SETI uses a network of radio telescopes to search for frequencies that may indicate intelligent design, there are also attempts to communicate with extraterrestrials by using different ways to listen for messages as well as send messages. This article outlines a phenomenological approach that includes changes in cognition due to the creation of electronic sounds mixed (...)
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  28. Sound words and sonic fictions : writing the ephemeral.Salomé Voegelin - 2017 - In Marcel Cobussen, Vincent Meelberg & Barry Truax (eds.), The Routledge companion to sounding art. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge.
     
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  29.  14
    Robin James, The Sonic Episteme: Acoustic Resonance, Neoliberalism, and Biopolitics.Elliott H. Powell - 2021 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 79 (2):264-268.
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  30.  27
    Hearing things: Inside outness and ‘sonic ghosts’.Jane Grant - 2012 - Technoetic Arts 9 (2-3):217-223.
    This article will consider sound as a glue between internal and external experience, a link between sensing and cognition, memory and perception. In looking at research in neuroscience, specifically Eugene Izhikevich’s work with models of spiking neurons, parallels may be drawn with faulty source monitoring where a subject cannot differentiate between external and internal stimuli, and with a collapsing of present into the past. These ideas will be discussed through a number of sonic artworks that have neural plasticity, space (...)
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  31.  3
    The Sonic Episteme: Acoustic Resonance, Neoliberalism, and Biopolitics. Duke University Press, 2019, 256 pp., $26.95 paper. [REVIEW]Elliott H. Powell - forthcoming - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism.
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  32.  10
    Cryptic insect soundscapes: Ecological sound art as a prompt for auralization.Lisa Schonberg, Érica Marinho do Vale, Tainara V. Sobroza & Fabricio Beggiato Baccaro - 2023 - Technoetic Arts 21 (2):285-300.
    Much insect sounding is beyond the limits of typical human hearing ability. This sonic separation is exacerbated by a socialized narrative of fear and avoidance of insects in many western societies. With the use of audio technologies to expand our senses, we can embrace opportunities to get to know sensory and communicative insect sound-worlds beyond our own. Ecological sound art – sound art that has an environmentalist intent – is a tangible and accessible means of listening to these sounds. (...)
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  33.  28
    Assistive Device Art: aiding audio spatial location through the Echolocation Headphones.Aisen C. Chacin, Hiroo Iwata & Victoria Vesna - 2018 - AI and Society 33 (4):583-597.
    Assistive Device Art derives from the integration of Assistive Technology and Art, involving the mediation of sensorimotor functions and perception from both, psychophysical methods and conceptual mechanics of sensory embodiment. This paper describes the concept of ADA and its origins by observing the phenomena that surround the aesthetics of prosthesis-related art. It also analyzes one case study, the Echolocation Headphones, relating its provenience and performance to this new conceptual and psychophysical approach of tool design. This ADA tool is designed to (...)
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  34.  59
    Apropos sonification: a broad view of data as music and sound. [REVIEW]Peter Gena - 2012 - AI and Society 27 (2):197-205.
    Numbers have been identified with symbolic data forever. The profound association of both with acoustics, music, and sonic art from Pythagoras to current work is beyond reproach. Recently, sonification looks for ways to realize symbolic data (representing results or measurements) as well as “raw” data (signals, impulses, images, etc.) into compositions. In the strictest sense, everything in a computer is symbolic, that is, represented by 0s and 1s. In the arts, the digital age has broadened and enhanced the conceptual (...)
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  35. The Body Technology. The Sensuality of Low Frequency Sound / Cat Hope ; Cynosuric Bodies / Susan E. Green-Mateu and Margaret Schedel ; The Violining Body in Anthèmes II by Pierre Boulez / Irine Røsnes ; 'Try to walk with the sound of my footsteps so that we can stay together' : Sonic Presence and Virtual Embodiment in Janet Cardiff and Georges Bures Miller's Audio and Video Walks / Sophie Knezic ; Breathing (as Listening) : An Emotional Bridge for Telepresence / Ximena Alarcón-Díaz ; Foley Performance and Sonic Implicit Interactions : How Foley Artists Might Hold the Secret for the Design of Sonic Implicit Interactions.Sandra Pauletto - 2022 - In Linda O'Keeffe & Isabel Nogueira (eds.), The body in sound, music and performance: studies in audio and sonic arts. New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
     
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  36.  13
    The Routledge companion to sounding art.Marcel Cobussen, Vincent Meelberg & Barry Truax (eds.) - 2017 - Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge.
    The Routledge Companion to Sounding Art presents an overview of the issues, methods, and approaches crucial for the study of sound in artistic practice. Thirty-six essays cover a variety of interdisciplinary approaches to studying sounding art from the fields of musicology, cultural studies, sound design, auditory culture, art history, and philosophy. The companion website hosts sound examples and links to further resources. The collection is organized around six main themes: Sounding Art: The notion of sounding art, its relation to sound (...)
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  37.  8
    Wittgenstein, Theory and the Arts.[author unknown] - 2003 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 61 (3):299-314.
    Books reviewed in this article:Allen Richard and Malcolm Turvey (eds.), Wittgenstein, Theory and the ArtsBrady Emily and Jerrold Levinson (eds.), Aesthetic Concepts: Essays after SibleyRob Van Gerwen (ed.), Richard Wollheim on the Art of Painting: Art as Expression and RepresentationKeith Moxey, The Practice of Persuasion: Paradox & Power in Art HistoryJames J. Sheehan, Museums in the German Art World from the End of the Old Regime to the Rise of ModernismTheodore Gracyk, I Wanna Be Me: Rock Music and the Politics (...)
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  38.  14
    On the priority of the musical impulse and the acoustical limits to sonic gesture.David S. Goldsmith - 1974 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 32 (3):409-413.
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  39.  68
    Relationships of sonification to music and sound art.Scot Gresham-Lancaster - 2012 - AI and Society 27 (2):207-212.
    The definition of sonification has been reframed in recent years but remains somewhat in flux; the basic concepts and procedural flows have remained relatively unchanged. Recent definitions have focused on the objective the important uses of sonification in terms of scientific method. The full realization of the potential of the field must also include the craft and art of music composition. The author proposes examining techniques of sonification in a two-order framework: direct and procedural. The impact of new technologies and (...)
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  40. On The Priority of the Musical Impulse and the Acoustical Limits to Sonic Gesture.David S. Goldsmith - 1970 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 28 (3):409-414.
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  41.  20
    A Reappraisal of Bennett Reimer and His Meanings of Art.Randall Everett Allsup & Judy Lewis - 2015 - Philosophy of Music Education Review 23 (2):168.
    Consistent throughout his writings on aesthetics and education, Bennett Reimer maintained the idea that music must be understood and studied as non-conceptual. Music’s forms of knowing point to the subjective realms of life and operate effectively without the assistance or necessity of language. An education in the arts is an education in feelings, a claim that became untenable in an age of evidence and standardization. Critics hostile to a characterization of music as unknowable pointed to very clear concepts, locating the (...)
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  42.  2
    Resonant bodies in contemporary European art cinema.Emilija Talijan - 2022 - Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
    The body at close range: volume and the unlistenable in Catherine Breillat's Anatomy of Hell -- Sonic subjection: Gaspar Noé's Irreversible and the dystopian limits of the resonant body -- A stranger everywhere: the écho-monde of Tony Gatlif's Exiles -- Feedback, asynchronicity, and sonic sociabilities: Arnaud des Pallière's Adieu -- Listening at the limit: non-human noise in Lars von Trier's Antichrist -- Listening to things: Foley as "alien phenomenology" and Peter Strickland's Berberian sound studio.
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  43.  12
    From music to sound: the emergence of sound in 20th- and 21st-century music.Makis Solomos - 2020 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    From Music to Sound is an examination of the six musical histories whose convergence produces the emergence of sound, offering a plural, original history of new music. Both well-known and lesser-known works and composers are anaylsed in detail, from Debussy to contemporary music in the early 21st century; from rock to electronica; from the sound objects of the earliest musique concrète to current electroacoustic music; from the Poème électronique of Le Corbusier-Varèse-Xenakis to the most recent inter-arts attempts. Covering theory, analysis (...)
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  44.  14
    Philosophers on Music: Experience, Meaning, and Work.Kathleen Stock (ed.) - 2007 - New York: Oxford University Press UK.
    Philosophers on Music: Experience, Meaning, and Work presents significant new contributions to central issues in the philosophy of music, written by leading philosophers working in the analytic tradition. The issues tackled include: the question of what sort of thing a work of music is; the nature of the relation between a musical work and versions of it; the nature of musical expression and its contribution to musical experience; the relation of music to metaphor; the nature of musical irony; the musical (...)
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  45.  43
    The aesthetic turn in sonification towards a social and cultural medium.Stephen Barrass - 2012 - AI and Society 27 (2):177-181.
    The public release of datasets on the internet by government agencies, environmental scientists, political groups and many other organizations has fostered a social practice of data visualization. The audiences have expectations of production values commensurate with their daily experience of professional visual media. At the same time, access to this data has allowed visual designers and artists to apply their skills to what was previously a field dominated by scientists and engineers. The ‘aesthetic turn’ in data visualization has sparked debates (...)
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  46.  14
    Bodily Expression in Electronic Music: Perspectives on Reclaiming Performativity.Andreas Dorschel, Deniz Peters & Gerhard Eckel (eds.) - 2012 - Routledge.
    In this book, scholars and artists explore the relation between electronic music and bodily expression from perspectives including aesthetics, philosophy of mind, phenomenology, dance and interactive performance arts, sociology, computer music and sonic arts, and music theory, transgressing disciplinary boundaries and established beliefs. The historic decoupling of action and sound generation might be seen to have distorted or even effaced the expressive body, with the retention of performance qualities via recoupling not equally retaining bodily expressivity. When, where, and what (...)
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  47. Bodily Expression in Electronic Music: Perspectives on Reclaiming Performativity, 2nd. ed.Andreas Dorschel, Gerhard Eckel & Deniz Peters (eds.) - 2013 - Routledge.
    In this book, scholars and artists explore the relation between electronic music and bodily expression from perspectives including aesthetics, philosophy of mind, phenomenology, dance and interactive performance arts, sociology, computer music and sonic arts, and music theory, transgressing disciplinary boundaries and established beliefs. The historic decoupling of action and sound generation might be seen to have distorted or even effaced the expressive body, with the retention of performance qualities via recoupling not equally retaining bodily expressivity. When, where, and what (...)
     
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  48. What 4′33″ also Is: A Response to Dodd.Matteo Ravasio - 2019 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 97 (2):395-400.
    Julian Dodd [2018] persuasively argues that John Cage’s 4′33″ should be characterised as a silent piece, as opposed to a sonically replete piece, containing the environmental sounds that occur as it is performed; a piece of performance art, but not a piece of music; a work of conceptual art. While I agree with Dodd’s claims, I contend that he fails to account for two features of 4′33″. I argue that a qualified description of Cage’s work as belonging to a subgenre (...)
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  49. Why Delight in Screamed Vocals? Emotional Hardcore and the Case against Beautifying Pain.Sean T. Murphy - forthcoming - British Journal of Aesthetics.
    Emotional hardcore and other music genres featuring screamed vocals are puzzling for the appreciator. The typical fan attaches appreciative value to musical screams of emotional pain all the while acknowledging it would be inappropriate to hold similar attitudes towards their sonically similar everyday counterpart: actual human screaming. Call this the screamed vocals problem. To solve the problem, I argue we must attend to the anti-sublimating aims that get expressed in the emotional hardcore vocalist’s choice to scream the lyrics. Screamed vocals (...)
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  50. Thinking with Susanne Langer: Sonar Entanglements with the Non-human.Lona Gaikis - 2021 - Open Philosophy 4 (1):149-161.
    An aesthetic and epistemological departure from ocular centrism has occurred in the wake of current technological evolutions and the posthuman turn. The sonic exploration of the more-than-human takes artists and philosophers beyond anthropomorphism to reveal the hidden patterning of life forms and yet-unfathomed universes. The conflation of nature with culture is one shift that takes place when thinking with sounds and rhythm and studying our environments. On an ontological level, a reordering of subject and object occurs when encountering the (...)
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