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Can One Speak of Narrativity in Music?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2020
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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.
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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
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