
From Prehistoric Bone Flutes To Pipe Organs To Digital Synthesizers, Instruments Have Been Important To Musical Cultures Around The World. Yet, How Do Instruments Affect Musical Organization? And How Might They Influence Players' Bodies And Minds? Music At Hand Explores These Questions With A Distinctive Blend Of Music Theory, Psychology, And Philosophy. Practicing An Instrument, Of Course, Builds Bodily Habits And Skills. But It Also Develops Connections Between Auditory And Motor Regions In A Player's Brain. These Multi-sensory Links Are Grounded In Particular Instrumental Interfaces. They Reflect The Ways That An Instrument Converts Action Into Sound, And The Ways That It Coordinates Physical And Tonal Space. Ultimately, These Connections Can Shape Listening, Improvisation, Or Composition. This Means That Pianos, Guitars, Horns, And Bells Are Not Simply Tools For Making Notes. Such Technologies, As Creative Prostheses, Also Open Up Possibilities For Musical Action, Perception, And Cognition. Throughout The Book, Author Jonathan De Souza Examines Diverse Musical Case Studies-from Beethoven To Blues Harmonica, From Bach To Electronic Music-introducing Novel Methods For The Analysis Of Body-instrument Interaction. A Companion Website Supports These Analytical Discussions With Audiovisual Examples, Including Motion-capture Videos And Performances By The Author. Written In Lucid Prose, Music At Hand Offers Substantive Insights For Music Scholars, While Remaining Accessible To Non-specialist Readers. This Wide-ranging Book Will Engage Music Theorists And Historians, Ethnomusicologists, Organologists, Composers, And Performers-but Also Psychologists, Philosophers, Media Theorists, And Anyone Who Is Curious About How Musical Experience Is Embodied And Conditioned By Technology
This book investigates how musical instruments function not merely as tools for sound production, but as cognitive and physical extensions that shape musical perception, composition, and performance. Jonathan De Souza, a scholar of music theory, synthesizes perspectives from psychology, philosophy, and musicology to argue that instruments act as creative prostheses. By analyzing the interaction between human biology and instrumental interfaces, he demonstrates how the physical constraints and affordances of various technologies fundamentally alter the cognitive processes of the musician.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts in music theory and organology recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of embodied cognition in music. Readers frequently note the clarity of the prose, which successfully bridges the gap between technical musicological analysis and broader philosophical inquiry.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
1900-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press,
ISBN-10:
0190271140
ISBN-13:
9780190271145
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