
What Is The Difference Between A Performance Of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony And The Symphony Itself? What Does It Mean For Musicians To Be Faithful To The Works They Perform? To Answer Such Questions, Lydia Goehr Combines Philosophical And Historical Methods Of Enquiry. Finding Anglo-american Philosophy Inadequate For The Task, She Shows That A Historical Perspective Is Indispensable To A Full Understanding Of Musical Ontology. Goehr Examines The Concepts And Assumptions Behind The Practice Of Classical Music In The Nineteenth Century And Demonstrates How Different They Were From Those Of Previous Centuries. She Rejects The Finding That The Concept Of A Musical Work Emerged In The Sixteenth Century, Placing Its Emergence Instead Around 1800. She Describes How The Concept Of A Work Then Came To Define The Norms, Expectations, And Behaviour That We Now Associate With Classical Music. Out Of The Historical Thesis Goehr Draws Philosophical Conclusions About The Normative Functions Of Concepts And Ideals. She Also Addresses Current Debates Among Conductors, Early Music Performers, And Avant-gardists.
What is the ontological status of a musical work, and how did the concept of the 'work' fundamentally alter the practice of Western classical music around 1800? Lydia Goehr, a philosopher of music, synthesizes historical inquiry with analytical philosophy to challenge the assumption that the concept of a musical work has existed throughout history. By examining the shift in norms and expectations during the nineteenth century, she argues that our current understanding of musical performance and fidelity is a relatively modern construct rather than an eternal truth.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts and musicologists frequently cite this text as a foundational work in the philosophy of music for its rigorous challenge to traditional ontological assumptions. Readers often note the academic density of the prose, which requires a strong background in philosophical discourse to fully grasp the author's arguments.
Page Count:
330
Publication Date:
1994-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press, Incorporated
ISBN-10:
0191520012
ISBN-13:
9780191520013
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