5 research outputs found
Impurely Musical Make-Believe
In this study we offer a new way of applying Kendall Waltonâs theory of make-believe to musical experiences in terms of psychologically inhibited games of make-believe, which Walton attributes chiefly to ornamental representations. Reading Waltonâs theory somewhat against the grain, and supplementing our discussion with a set of instructive examples, we argue that there is clear theoretical gain in explaining certain important aspects of composition and performance in terms of psychologically inhibited games of make-believe consisting of two interlaced game-worlds. Such complex games can accommodate a continuous rich spectrum of congruent modes of listening, which broaches both the formalist-type and the narrativist-type. We conclude that this sort of oblique reading of Waltonâs original theory actually complements and completes Waltonâs recent theoretic angle concerning thoughtwriting in music by way of affording it with a suitable conception for a mechanism of appropriation for music
Susanne Langer on Music and Time
Susanne Langerâs idea of the primary apparition of music involves a dichotomy between two kinds of temporality: âfelt timeâ and âclock timeâ. For Langer, musical time is exclusively felt time, and in this sense, music is âtime made audibleâ. However, Langer also postulates a âstrong suspension thesisâ: the swallowing up of clock time in the illusion of felt time. In this essay, we take issue with the âstrong suspension thesisâ, its philosophic foundation and its implications. We argue that this thesis is overstated and misdirecting insofar as it purports to describe what we experience when we hear music with understanding, and that it rests on a contested presupposition concerning the conceptual primacy of memory-time
Seeing One Another Anew with Godfrey Reggio's Visitors
Visitors is a hybrid art film fusing photography and music into a complex abstract texture for the attention of the viewer. It is also a requiem for our âNew Order for the Agesâ in which humanity grows more and more technologically interconnected and communality means being alone together. We argue that Visitors can be experienced as a seeing aid designed to situate the viewer bewilderingly as needing to reacquire the capacity to see human beings as human beings. This is achieved by various cinematic strategies of dĂ©paysement, which render the familiar uncommon again by enabling us to recapture the uncanniness of what it is to be human. Most strikingly, seeing one another anew is facilitated in Visitors by the autonomous gradual musical processes of Philip Glassâs minimalist score, which not only affords a musical narrative for the imagery but also binds the film ironically to Beethovenâs Ninth Symphony
A Critique of Susanne Langerâs View of Musical Temporality
Susanne Langerâs idea of the primary apparition of music involves a dichotomy between two kinds of temporality: âfelt timeâ and âclock time.â For Langer, musical time is exclusively felt time, and in this sense, music is âtime made audible.â However, Langer also postulates what we would call âa strong suspension thesisâ: the swallowing up of clock time in the illusion of felt time. In this paper we take issue with the âstrong suspension thesisâ and its implications and ramifications regarding not only musical meaning, but also the purported metaphysics of music construed as essentially inhering in felt time. We argue that this thesis is overstated and misdirecting insofar as it purports to describe what we experience when we hear music with understanding. We discuss a selection of examples of repetitive formations, from mediaeval music to contemporary music, which show that persistent, motion-inhibiting repetition undermines the listenerâs ability to identify order and coherence due to a relative inability to anticipate the next occurrence of a differentiating musical event. We argue that Langerâs one-sided view of musical temporality, which patently relies on the conceptual framework of memory time and the specious present, exemplifies what we propose to call âthe searchlight model of musical understanding,â wherein the constant span of illumination of the searchlight (representing the span of the specious present) moves continuously parallel to, and along, its postulated target, i.e., the music heard, as it âilluminatesâ it. We argue that, in the last analysis, memory time conceptually presupposes the publicly identifiable means of chronometric length. One maintains the âstrong suspension thesisâ on pain of conceptual confusion