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Being Time: Case Studies in Musical Temporality

Autor Research Fellow Richard Glover, Bryn Harrison, Jennie Gottschalk
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 26 dec 2018
Being Time invites a deep consideration of the personal experience of temporality in music, focusing on the perceptual role of the listener. Through individual case studies, this book centers on musical works that deal with time in radical ways. These include pieces by Morton Feldman, James Saunders, Chiyoko Szlavnics, Ryoji Ikeda, Toshiya Tsunoda, Laurie Spiegel and André O. Möller. Multiple perspectives are explored through a series of encounters, initially between an individual and a work, and subsequently with each author's varying experiences of temporality. The authors compare their responses to features such as repetition, speed, duration and scale from a perceptual standpoint, drawing in reflections on aspects such as musical memory and anticipation. The observations made in this book are accessible and relevant to readers who are interested in exploring issues of temporality from a broad range of disciplinary perspectives.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781623564940
ISBN-10: 1623564948
Pagini: 200
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Caracteristici

An important contribution to sound studies linking experimental music and time

Notă biografică

Richard Glover is a composer and Reader in Music at the University of Wolverhampton, UK. Jennie Gottschalk is a composer and the author of Experimental Music Since 1970.Bryn Harrison is a composer and Reader in Composition at the University of Huddersfield, UK.

Cuprins

AcknowledgementsIntroductionRichard Glover, Jennie Gottschalk, and Bryn HarrisonChapter One: Foreshadowing and Recollection: Listening Through Morton Feldman's Piano, Violin, Viola, CelloBryn HarrisonPostlude to Chapter OneRichard GloverChapter Two: Musical brevity in James Saunders' Compatibility hides itself and 511 possible mosaicsBryn HarrisonPostlude to Chapter TwoJennie GottschalkChapter Three: Separation and Continuity in Chiyoko Szlavnics' Gradients of DetailRichard GloverPostlude to Chapter ThreeJennie GottschalkChapter Four: Filtering Temporality in Ryoji Ikeda's +/-Richard GloverPostlude to Chapter FourBryn HarrisonChapter Five: Granulated Time: Toshiya Tsunoda's O Kokos Tis AnixisJennie GottschalkPostlude to Chapter FiveBryn HarrisonChapter Six: Monoliths: Laurie Spiegel's The Expanding Universe and André O. Möller's musik für orgel und eine(n) tonsetzer(in)Jennie GottschalkPostlude to Chapter SixRichard GloverChapter Seven: Observations on Musical Behaviors and TemporalityRichard Glover, Jennie Gottschalk, and Bryn HarrisonEpilogueAppendix: Suggested Further Reading and Listening

Recenzii

This is one of the richest, most innovative treatments of temporality's relation to music to appear in the last decade. Musicologists, composers, sound artists, and interdisciplinary scholars interested in the experience of time will find this book rewarding. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty and professionals.
Being Time invites readers to share in the subjective reflections of its three authors, who are also accomplished composers ... The selection of musical material is adventurous and uncompromising ... [It] offers closely monitored, musicologically precise commentaries.
Being Time is fearless in its approach and makes a powerful case for musical experience as a fundamentally intersubjective encounter. It is deeply experimental-a humane and pedagogical project.
Being Time locates the potentialities of a work in a listener's ears, mind, and body; centralising listening as the phenomenal, temporal process of seeking identity, form, context, and meaning by reverberations that energize the sensory experiences of location, dislocation; the material and the immaterial; and the mirroring and unmooring of personal and social narratives. This book seeks to find and expand our ways of talking and writing about music and sound art practices, appreciating perception as a critical part of reception.