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Schenker's Argument and the Claims of Music Theory: 9 (Cambridge Studies in Music Theory and Analysis, Series Number 9)

Schenker's Argument and the Claims of Music Theory: 9 (Cambridge Studies in Music Theory and Analysis, Series Number 9)

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Leslie David Blasius
Cambridge University Press
Edition: First Edition, 10/3/1996
EAN 9780521550857, ISBN10: 0521550858

Hardcover, 176 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.4 cm
Language: English

Heinrich Schenker's theoretical and analytical works claim to resubstantiate the unique artistic presence of the canonic work, and thus reject those musical disciplines such as psychoacoustics and systematic musicology which derive from the natural sciences. In this respect his writing reflects the counter-positivism endemic to the German academic discourse of the first decades of the twentieth century. The rhetoric of this stance, however, conceals a sophisticated programme wherein Schenker situates his project in relation to these sciences, arguing his reading of the musical text as a synthesis of a descriptive psychology and an explanatory historiography (which itself embeds both paleographic and philological assumptions). This book rereads Schenker's project as an attempt to reconstruct music theory as a discipline against the background of the empirical musical sciences of the later nineteenth century.

Foreword Ian Bent
Preface
Part I. The Appeal to Psychology
1. A new program for music theory
2. The psychologistic argument
3. The contrapuntal laboratory
4. An epistemological crisis and a plausible solution
5. A descriptive and analytic psychology
Part II. The Historiological Imperative
6. The authority of history
7. The improvisational imagination, editing, execution
8. The interior performance
9. The paleographic argument
10. The philological paradigm
Part III. The Objective Synthesis
11. The coordination of discourses
12. System and synthesis
13. Closure
14. Representation
15. A priori and a posteriori theories
16. Two polemics
17. The function of ideology
Bibliography
Indexes.