Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Editors' Acknowledgments
- 1 Performance and authenticity
- Part I Performance, religion, and authenticity
- Part II Understanding, performance, and authenticity
- 5 Understanding music
- 6 Understanding music
- 7 Musical performance as analytical communication
- 8 Performance authenticity possible, practical, virtuous
- 9 Why is it impossible in language to articulate the meaning of a work of music?
- Part III Authenticity, poetry, and performance
- Index
6 - Understanding music
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Editors' Acknowledgments
- 1 Performance and authenticity
- Part I Performance, religion, and authenticity
- Part II Understanding, performance, and authenticity
- 5 Understanding music
- 6 Understanding music
- 7 Musical performance as analytical communication
- 8 Performance authenticity possible, practical, virtuous
- 9 Why is it impossible in language to articulate the meaning of a work of music?
- Part III Authenticity, poetry, and performance
- Index
Summary
Michael Tanner's interesting and wide-ranging essay raises a large number of issues: how the discontinuity of musical experience with the rest of our experience is compatible with music's importance to us; whether music is a language or a set of languages; whether our musical vocabulary, by itself or in conjunction with our non-musical vocabulary, enables us to characterize our experience of music adequately; what the relation is between technical and non-technical characterizations of music, and how important each of these is in the appreciation of music; what it is for a musical work to be fully coherent, and whether the coherence of one part of a work with the rest of the work can be established by musical analysis; what the understanding of music consists in and whether there are different kinds of understanding of a musical work; what determines the musical value of a piece of music. I shall not be able to take up each of these issues. I shall concentrate upon one of the topics that lies at the heart of the aesthetics of music: the nature of the experience that a listener has if he hears a musical work with understanding. And I shall begin by making two general points about the somewhat nebulous and polymorphous concept of understanding music. These points do not go against any of Tanner's suggestions – on the contrary, they are congenial to his approach.
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- Information
- Performance and Authenticity in the Arts , pp. 114 - 128Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999
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