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Thought and Play in Musical Rhythm offers new understandings of
musical rhythm through the analysis and comparison of diverse
repertoires, performance practices, and theories as formulated and
transmitted in speech or writing. Editors Richard K. Wolf, Stephen
Blum, and Christopher Hasty address a productive tension in musical
studies between universalistic and culturally relevant approaches
to the study of rhythm. Reacting to commonplace ideas in (Western)
music pedagogy, the essays explore a range of perspectives on
rhythm: its status as an "element" of music that can be usefully
abstracted from timbre, tone, and harmony; its connotations of
regularity (or, by contrast, that rhythm is what we hear against
the grain of background regularity); and its special embodiment in
percussion parts. Unique among studies of musical rhythm, the
collection directs close attention to ways performers and listeners
conceptualize aspects of rhythm and questions many received
categories for describing rhythm. By drawing the ear and the mind
to tensions, distinctions, and aesthetic principles that might
otherwise be overlooked, this focus on local concepts enables the
listener to dispel assumptions about how music works "in general."
Readers may walk away with a few surprises, become more aware of
their assumptions, and/or think of new ways to shock their students
out of complacency.
Drawing on insights from the modern "process" philosophy of
Bergson, William James, and A. N. Whitehead, Christopher Hasty's
Meter as Rhythm releases meter from its mechanistic connotations
and recognizes it as a concrete, visceral agent of musical
expression. Hasty reinterprets oppositions of law and freedom,
structure and process, determinacy and indeterminacy to form a
theory that engages diverse repertories and aesthetic issues. The
revised 20th anniversary edition facilitates the work's current
contexts of application, from new subfields in ethnomusicology and
music cognition to non-music fields like literary studies, physics,
and biology.
Historical, theoretical and analytical studies of principally
19-20c topics, reflecting current musical research. This collection
of nineteen essays, all by leaders in the field of music theory,
reflects the rich diversity of topics and approaches currently
being explored. The contributions fall within three principal areas
of study that haveremained at the heart of the discipline. One is
historical research, which includes efforts to trace the
development of theoretical ideas and their philosophical bases.
Representing this broad category are essays dealing with issues
like Scriabin's mysticism, neoclassicism, modern aesthetics, and
the development of the concept of pitch collection in
twentieth-century theoretical writings. The second area embraces
the theory and analysis of common-practicetonality and its
associated repertoire (including chromatic and 'transitional'
music). Within this category are several studies related directly
to or derived from Schenkerian theory, covering repertoire from
Bach through Schubert and Chopin to Gershwin. Complementing these
articles are a study of a chromatic work by Liszt and an essay on
Schoenberg's concept of tonality. The third broad category includes
the large body of work associated with the theoryand analysis of
post-tonal music. Representing this extensive area of inquiry are
essays dealing with voice leading in atonal music and extending
Allen Forte's theory of the set complex, and analytical studies
dealing with works by Schoenberg and Webern. Adding to these
contributions are articles that deal with works by composers less
frequently discussed in the analytical literature, Milhaud and
Peter Maxwell Davies, and an empirical study of aural cognition of
atonal and tonal music. These essays, all by colleagues, friends,
and students of Allen Forte are intended as a celebrationof his
enormous contribution to the discipline of music theory. James
Baker is Professor of Music at Brown University; David Beach is
Dean of the Faculty of Music at the University of Toronto; Jonathan
Bernard is Professor of Music at the University of Washington.
Thought and Play in Musical Rhythm offers new understandings of
musical rhythm through the analysis and comparison of diverse
repertoires, performance practices, and theories as formulated and
transmitted in speech or writing. Editors Richard K. Wolf, Stephen
Blum, and Christopher Hasty address a productive tension in musical
studies between universalistic and culturally relevant approaches
to the study of rhythm. Reacting to commonplace ideas in (Western)
music pedagogy, the essays explore a range of perspectives on
rhythm: its status as an "element" of music that can be usefully
abstracted from timbre, tone, and harmony; its connotations of
regularity (or, by contrast, that rhythm is what we hear against
the grain of background regularity); and its special embodiment in
percussion parts. Unique among studies of musical rhythm, the
collection directs close attention to ways performers and listeners
conceptualize aspects of rhythm and questions many received
categories for describing rhythm. By drawing the ear and the mind
to tensions, distinctions, and aesthetic principles that might
otherwise be overlooked, this focus on local concepts enables the
listener to dispel assumptions about how music works "in general."
Readers may walk away with a few surprises, become more aware of
their assumptions, and/or think of new ways to shock their students
out of complacency.
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