The first prelude to the
In this paper I counter the formalistic rejection of musical meaning and the consequent dismissal of the analogy between music and language. Although musical formalists may concede that music can express emotions and offer sonic analogues of dynamic relations, they claim that music has no semantics, and, consequently, is not like language. However, the formalist account of linguistic meaning overlooks the pragmatic view of linguistic meaning. According to such an approach, language is a kind of action and linguistic meaning is determined by the use of language in specific contexts. Drawing on pragmatics, I will suggest that musical meaning is structurally and interestingly analogous to linguistic meaning, understood in such a way. A pragmatic understanding of music as communication, which is also supported by philosophical and empirical research on musical power to embody personal traits, is all what we need for answering positively the question of musical meaning. Musical works and musical performances are, like speech acts, communicational actions that activate and determine the vague and undetermined meaning of music, originated by music power of representing dynamic and emotional relations. Music’s determined meaning is actualized in virtue of its contexts of use (accordingly to the cultural-social conventions of practices), while, conversely, musical actions contribute meaning to its context(s).
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Beethoven’s music is imageless, is not an image of anything, and yet is an image of the whole: an imageless image. This judgement by Theodor W. Adorno on Beethoven barely seems connected to empirical reality. This is precisely why it raises the question of the connection between Beethoven’s music and the film
Structural composition is indebted to an emphatic orientation towards art music. It follows the tradition of Bach, Beethoven and Schoenberg, and elevates the inherent characteristic of serialism, the music of Xenakis, computer music and complexism its key principle: composing structures. The article presents five concepts that characterise such a compositional approach: musical systems, functives and functions, fields, structures and their relationships, and notation. It emerges that structural composition does not aim to formulate laws or declare one particular style as binding. Rather, it expresses a particular compositional thinking whose aim is to shape every element in every area of a musical composition, whether audible or not.
A two-volume social history of music has been published under the title
In his monograph, Rüdiger Görner focuses on aspects of acoustic and auditive narrative strategies in Kafka’s work. In order to establish a systematic connection between different types of text, he tries to show that notwithstanding the disparities, one can reconstruct a
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