Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2020
The question of musical narrativity, while by no means new, is making a comeback as the order of the day in the field of musicological thought. In May 1988 a conference on the theme ‘Music and the Verbal Arts: Interactions’ was held at Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire. A fortnight later, a group of musicologists and literary theorists was invited to the Universities of Berkeley and Stanford to assess, in the course of four intense round-table discussions, whether it is legitimate to recognize a narrative dimension in music. In November of the same year, the annual conference of the American Musicological Society in Baltimore presented a session entitled ‘Text and Narrative’, chaired by Carolyn Abbate, and, at the instigation of Joseph Kerman, a session devoted to Edward T. Cone's The Composer's Voice. A number of articles deal with the subject in our specialized periodicals: I am thinking in particular of the studies published in 19th-Century Music by Anthony Newcomb – ‘Once More “Between Absolute and Programme Music”: Schumann's Second Symphony’ and ‘Schumann and Late Eighteenth-Century Narrative Strategies’ – or, on the French-speaking side of musicology, of Marta Grabocz's article ‘La sonate en si mineur de Liszt: une stratégie narrative complexe’ and the essays of the Finnish semiologist Eero Tarasti. No doubt a good many articles will emerge from the above conferences. And we are awaiting the appearance of Carolyn Abbate's book Unsung Voices: Narrative in Nineteenth-Century Music.
1 I am particularly grateful to Karol Berger and Anthony Newcomb for inviting me to this symposium. Without the list of papers provided for this occasion, and exchanges with the other participants, I would not have been in a position to prepare the present article, of which the first version was the subject of the Keynote Address at the Annual Conference of the Royal Musical Association on 7 April 1989 in London. I sent this text personally to Newcomb to obtain some feedback regarding my criticisms of his approach, and I am grateful to him for the kindly and constructive reception which he gave them. My gratitude should also go to Carolyn Abbate, François Delalande and Jean Molino for their pertinent advice The present version takes account of their observationsGoogle Scholar
2 Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1974Google Scholar
3 19th-Century Music, 7 (1984), 233–50Google Scholar
4 Ibid., 11 (1987), 164–74. See also ‘Stratégies narratives et perception de la musique du début du dix-neuvième siècle’, Contrechamps, 10 (1989), 12–24Google Scholar
5 Analyse musicale, 8 (1987), 64–70Google Scholar
6 ‘Pour une narratologie de Chopin’, International Review of Aesthetics and Sociology of Music, 15 (1984), 53–75; ‘Une analyse sémiotique la mise en évidence d'un parcours narratif’, Analyse musicale, 16 (1989), 67–74.Google Scholar
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8 Claude Lévi-Strauss, L'homme nu (Paris, 1971), trans. John and Doreen Weightman as The Naked Man (London, 1981), 659–60.Google Scholar
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10 See ‘Situation de la sémiologie musicale’, Musique en jeu, 5 (November 1971), 3–17, ‘Trois modèles linguistiques pour l'analyse musicale’, ibid., 10 (March 1973), 3–11, and Fondements d'une sémiologie de la musique (Paris, 1975), part II.Google Scholar
11 Ithaca, 1978.Google Scholar
12 Story and Discourse, 113. I do not altogether agree with Chatman's statement because I am not sure that the ‘event’ and the ‘existent’ constitute the minimum ingredients for a narrative He writes: ‘There cannot be events without existents. And though it is true that a text can have existents without events (a portrait, a descriptive essay), no one would think of calling it a narrative’ (p. 113) I am not so sure, for in the description of a person or a landscape there is someone who speaks – the writer – and, among the infinity of things which can be said about this person or landscape, he has made a selection For us, he reconstructs a world and indeed relates to us his own experience of itGoogle Scholar
13 Ibid., 34Google Scholar
14 Ibid., 45Google Scholar
15 Paris, 1983, trans Kathleen McLaughlin and David Pellauer as Time and Narrative, 1 (Chicago, 1984)Google Scholar
16 Ricoeur, Paul, ‘The Model of the Text Meaningful Action Considered as a Text’, Social Research, 38 (1971), 529–62, original French text published in Du texte à l'action, Essais d'herméneutique, 2 (Paris, 1986), 183–211Google Scholar
17 Time and Narrative, i, 74Google Scholar
18 Ibid (my italics)Google Scholar
19 Ibid (my italics)Google Scholar
20 Ibid., 114 (my italics).Google Scholar
21 ‘Qu'est-ce qu'un récit?’, unpublished paper presented to the Department of Comparative Literature, University of Montreal, on 6 March 1975.Google Scholar
22 Robert Francès, La perception de la musique (Paris, 1958), Michel Imberty, Entendre la musique (Paris, 1979) and Les ećritures du temps (Paris, 1981)Google Scholar
23 Jean-Jacques Nattiez, Musicologie générale et sémiologie (Paris, 1987), 155–64 An English translation (Princeton University Press) is forthcomingGoogle Scholar
24 For example, Chatman, Story and Discourse, 9Google Scholar
25 I shall leave aside the question of why the adaptation of a known novel for a film never truly restores all that we have read. I recognize the story, but it is not really the same narrative 26 Unsung Voices, chap. 1Google Scholar
27 Theodor Wiesengrund Adorno, ‘Mahler Eine musikalische Physiognomik’, Gesammelte Schriften, xiii, ed Gretel Adorno and Rolf Tiedmann (Frankfurt, 1971), 149–319 (p. 225)Google Scholar
28 Ibid., 209Google Scholar
29 Ibid., 218Google Scholar
30 The Composer's Voice, 164Google Scholar
31 Ibid., 94Google Scholar
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33 Comment on écrit l'histoire (Paris, 1971)Google Scholar
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35 ‘Qu'est-ce qu'un récit?‘Google Scholar
36 IbidGoogle Scholar
37 Jean-Jacques Nattiez, ‘Y a-t-il une diégèse musicale?’, Musik und Verstehen, ed Peter Faltin and Hans-Peter Reinecke (Cologne, 1973), 247–57Google Scholar
38 ‘Once More “Between Absolute and Programme Music”’, 234.Google Scholar
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41 See also his ‘Stratégies narratives et perception de la musique’, 13–15 In a personal communication, Newcomb has indicated to me that he now considers the reference to Propp as erroneous, but, in so far as his conception of musical narrativity still rests on the notion of ‘plot archetype’, we must wait for the further development of his research in order to ascertain exactly what epistemological status he accords to these two notionsGoogle Scholar
42 Paris, 1970.Google Scholar
43 ‘“To Worship that Celestial Sound” Motives for Analysis’, Journal of Musicology, 1 (1982), 153–70, repr in Treitler, Music and the Historical Imagination (Cambridge, Mass., 1989), chap 2.Google Scholar
44 Jean Molino and Joelle Tamine, Introduction à l'analyse de la poésie, i (Paris, 1987)Google Scholar
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46 The Composer's Voice, 88Google Scholar
47 Ibid., 113.Google Scholar
48 Unsung Voices.Google Scholar
49 Nettl, Bruno, ‘Relaciones entre la lengua y la musica en el folklore’, Folklore Americas, 16 (1956), 1–11 (p 2)Google Scholar
50 Robert H. Hall, ‘Elgar and the Intonation of British English’, The Gramophone, 31 (1953), 6–7; Callaghan, Jean, ‘Did Elgar Speak English? Language and National Music Style. Comparative Semiotic Analysis’, unpublished paper presented to the Annual Conference of the Australian Musicological Society, Melbourne, September 1975Google Scholar
51 ‘Elgar and the Intonation of British English’, 6.Google Scholar
52 The Naked Man, 652–3.Google Scholar
53 Ibid., 647Google Scholar
54 Georgiades, Thrasybulos, Musik und Sprache (Heidelberg, 1954)Google Scholar
55 Norton, Richard, Tonality in Western Culture (University Park, PA, 1984).Google Scholar
56 Ibid., 65–71Google Scholar
57 Ibid., 202–5Google Scholar
58 Unsung Voices.Google Scholar
59 ‘Once More “Between Absolute and Programme Music”’, 240Google Scholar
60 ‘Stratégies narratives et perception de la musique’, 18Google Scholar
61 IbidGoogle Scholar
62 Ibid., 20.Google Scholar
63 Boetticher, Wolfgang, Robert Schumann Einfuhrung in Personlichkeit und Werk (Berlin, 1941), 611–13.Google Scholar
64 Carnaval de Schumann (Paris, 1971)Google Scholar
65 Quoted ibid., 31Google Scholar
66 Quoted in Edward A Lippman, ‘Theory and Practice in Schumann's Aesthetics’, Journal of the American Musicological Society, 17 (1964), 310–45 (p 318)Google Scholar
67 Ibid., 319Google Scholar
68 Ibid., 323Google Scholar
69 Ibid., 342Google Scholar
70 Le paradoxe du musicien (Paris, 1983), 280Google Scholar
71 ‘Le paradoxe du sociologue (esthétique et perception dans les travaux de P M Menger)’, Contrechamps, 10 (1989), 140–67Google Scholar
72 See, for a specific study of Répons from this standpoint, Nattiez, ‘“Répons” et la crise de la “communication” musicale contemporaine’, Inharmoniques, 2 (1987), 193–210Google Scholar