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Music, Culture and Ideas

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Leonard B. Meyer??, Music, the Arts, and Ideas, chapter two ... ?????, losing its identity in voluptuous sensation or in the reverie of day-dreams. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Music, Culture and Ideas


1
Music, Culture and Ideas
  • ??, ?????

2
What is a good music?
  • Leonard B. Meyer??, Music, the Arts, and Ideas,
    chapter two
  • ("Some Remarks on Value and Greatness in Music"
    ??????????)

3
What makes music great?
  • What makes music great? In grappling with these
    perplexing problems I have changed my mind many
    times, testing first this view then that finding
    this objection then another to what I thought at
    first to be tenable positions.
  • Nor have I as yet arrived at any fixed opinions
    or final conclusions.

4
What makes music great?
  • "What makes music great?" is one that anyone
    deeply concerned with his art must attempt at
    least to answer. We cannot nor can they for all
    their rationalizations-really escape from the
    problem of value.
  • This is true in two senses.
  • We are in fact continually making value judgments
    both for ourselves and others. I must choose
    between works, exercising value judgments.
  • The second reason - a system or ordering of
    values is implicit in his account of how and what
    art communicates. Indeed, as soon as we say it
    communicates, we introduce values into the
    discussion. At one time I subscribed to I. A.
    Richard's statement that "the two pillars upon
    which a theory of criticism must rest are an
    account of value and an account of communication

5
????????
  • ???????
  • ??????
  • ????????????

6
Good Work
  • ???
  • Bach B minor Mass

7
??????????
  • ????????????????

8
????????
  • FRANCESCO GEMINIANI Concerto grosso in E minor,
    Op. 3, No. 3 Allegro    0200
  • J. S. Bach
  • Fugue in G minor

9
Both
  • begin on the fifth degree of the scale, move
  • to the tonic
  • skip an octave, creates a structural gap, a sense
    of incompleteness.
  • We expect that the empty space thus outlined will
    be filled-in, made complete.
  • This melodic incompleteness is complemented by
    the rhythmic instability of this first musical
    shape. That is, the first separable musical
    events in both themes are up-beats which are
    oriented toward the stability of down-beats.

10
Both
  • In a sense the structural gap and the rhythmic
    up-beats have established
  • musical goals to be reached. We expect the
    melodic line to descend and ultimately
  • to come to rest on the tonic note, reaching a
    clear organizing accent in
  • the course of this motion.

11
Bach
  • theme moves down slowly with delays and temporary
    diversions
  • through related harmonic areas. It establishes
    various levels of
  • melodic activity with various potentials to be
    realized.
  • these delays are
  • rhythmic as well as melodic

12
Geminiani
  • moves directly-or almost directly-to its goal.
  • The second measure is chromatic and contains a
    potential for different modes of continuation. Of
    these the return to the B is certainly the most
    probable, but only slightly so.
  • once the B is reached, the descent to E seems
    almost inevitable. And when the theme falls to
    this obvious consequent with neither
  • delay nor diversion, it seems like a blatant
    platitude, a musical cliche

13
Geminiani
14
Bach
15
????
  • ?????? (tendencies)??????????
  • ???????????????????????
  • ????????, ????????????

16
Robert Penn Warren
  • ". . . a poem, to be good, must
  • earn itself. It is a motion toward a point of
    rest, but if it is not a resisted motion,
  • it is a motion of no consequence.

17
Information Theory ?????????
  • Resistence - Value
  • If we hear only
  • a single tone, a great number of different tones
    could follow it with equal probability.
  • If a sequence of two tones is heard the number of
    probable consequent tones is somewhat reduced

18
Information Theory ?????????
  • a situation is highly organized so that the
    possible consequents have a high degree of
    probability,
  • then if the probable occurs, the information
    communicated by the message is minimal. If, on
    the other hand,
  • the musical situation is less predictable so that
    the antecedent-consequent relationship does not
    have a high degree of probability, then the
    information contained in the musical message will
    be high.
  • ". . .the more probable the message, the less its
    information. Clichés,
  • for example, are less illuminating than great poem

19
Information Theory ?????????
  • ??(??)???
  • ???? ?????
  • She is as tall as Bill is
  • She is as tall as Blue
  • She is as tall blue lilacs are

20
Information Theory ?????????
  • desirable and undesirable uncertainty.
  • Desirable uncertainty is that which arises as a
    result of the structured probabilities of a
    musical style. Information is a function of such
    uncertainty.
  • Undesirable uncertainty arises when the
    probabilities are not known, either because
  • the listener's habit responses are not relevant
    to the style or because external interference
    obscures the structure of the situation in
    question

21
????????????
  • ???????????
  • ???? a smaller repertory of tones, that the
    distance of these notes from the tonic is
    smaller, that there is a great deal of
    repetition, though often slightly varied
    repetition, and so forth.
  • ????
  • ????????
  • The primitive seeks almost immediate
    gratification for his tendencies whether these be
    biological or musical. Nor can he tolerate
    uncertainty.
  • Note, by the way, that popular music can be
    distinguished from real jazz on the same basis.

22
?????/?????
  • ??????????????????
  • ??????????????
  • ?? , ??

23
  • ????????????????????
  • ?????????????
  • value refers to a quality of musical experience.
    It is inherent neither in the musical object per
    se nor in the mind of the listener per se.
    ??????????????, which takes place within an
    objective tradition, ??????????. ????,
    ???????????????? ?????????? (?????????)???????

24
????????
  • ??? Sensuous
  • ?????Associative-charactering
  • ??? Syntactical
  • ??????????????????? ???????????????????

25
????????
  • ??? Sensuous - ????immediate gratification of the
    sensuous and the exclamatory outburst of
    uncontrolled, pent-up energy
  • ??? Syntactical ---????delayed gratification
    arising out of the perception of and response to
    the syntactic relationships which shape and mold
    musical experience, whether intellectual or
    emotional.

26
????????
  • ???The associative may function with either. It
    may color our sensuous pleasures with the
    satisfactions of wish-fulfillment. Or it may
    shape our expectations as to the probabilities of
    musical progress by characterizing musical
    events.
  • ?????????????, ?????????, ????????????????????,
    ?????????????????. ????, ???????????, ???,
    ?????, ??????????????. ?????????-??????,
    ??????????????,

27
????????
  • ????, ?????????????????
  • ??- ??? vs. ??-???
  • ????????? vs. Beethoven??9????
  • Debussy ???? VS Beethoven??9
  • ???? Relativism ?????????????, ?????.
  • ???????, ??????. ?????????????

28
????????
  • ???????????, ???
  • ??????
  • ??????
  • ?????????????????????????, ??, ????????
  • G. H. Mead
  • ????????????, ???????, ???????,
    ????(self)??????(itself)???(self), ??????????,
    ?????, ??????????????. (self-realization????)

29
????????
  • the evaluation of alternative probabilities and
    the retrospective understanding of the
    relationships among musical events as they
    actually occurred leads to??(self-awareness)????(i
    ndividualization) that the syntactical response
    is more valuable than those responses in which
    ?????, losing its identity in voluptuous
    sensation or in the reverie of day-dreams.
  • works involving deviation and uncertainty are
    better than those offering more immediate
    satisfaction.
  • other modes of enjoyment are not without value,
    but rather that they are of a lesser order of
    value.

30
????????
  • aside from the most primitive forms of musical
    emotional outburst and the most blatant appeals
    to the sensuous such as one finds in the cheapest
    pop-arrangements,
  • no musical works of art in which syntactical
    relationships do not play a significant role. Nor
    will it do to try to arrange musical works in
    order of their syntactical vs. their
    sensuous-associative appeals.
  • Debussy????emphasizes the sensuous, is
    syntactically complex-as complex, Mozart's famous
    Piano Sonata in C Major

31
????????
  • The sensuous-associative is of minor importance
    in the consideration of value
  • Music must be evaluated syntactically
  • which of two works has greater sensuous appeal or
    evokes more poignant associations ?
  • the determinants of value from the syntactical
    viewpoint
  • that complexity, size, and length are not in
    themselves virtues.
  • the intricate and subtle interconnections of a
    complex work involve considerable resistance and
    uncertainty-and presumably information-value is
    thereby created.

32
??????
  • This viewpoint seems more plausible
  • as we become more familiar with a complex work
    and are therefore better able to comprehend the
    permutations and interrelations among musical
    events, our enjoyment is increased. For the
    information we get out of the work is increased.
  • meaningful events
  • must arise out of a set of probability
    relationships, a musical style
  • the capacity of the human mind to perceive and
    relate patterns to one another and to remember
    them would appear to limit complexity.

33
??????
  • complexity vs. value
  • while complexity is not the sufficient cause of
    value, the implication that the two are in no way
    related is simply not true .
  • a relatively simple but touching work
  • Schubert's song, "Das Wandern"
  • relatively simple pieces such as some of
    Schubert's songs or Chopin's Preludes are
    better-more rewarding than some large and complex
    works, such as, for instance, Strauss' Don
    Quixote. .

34
??????
  • information is judged not in absolute, but in
    relative terms.
  • For we evaluate not only the amount of
    information in a work but also the relationship
    between the stimulus "input" and the actual
    informational "output.
  • "principle of psychic economy"
  • two pieces - the same amount of information - not
    be equally good - one is less elegant and
    economical than the other.
  • a piece which is deficient in elegance may be
    better than a more economical piece because it
    contains substantially more information provides
    a richer musical experience.

35
Greatness??
  • The content of musical experience is also an
    important aspect of its quality
  • the essence of tragedy springs from the fact of
    human dignity
  • it is by our power to suffer, that we are of more
    value than the sparrows.
  • it is because tragic suffering, arising out of
    the ultimate uncertainties of human existence, is
    able to individualize and purify our wills that
    we are of more value than the sparrows.

36
Greatness??
  • Evil war, poverty, disease, old age, and all
    other forms of suffering
  • they lead to the degradation and dissolution of
    the self.
  • The individual will is lost in the primordial
    impulses of the group
  • Freud has pointed out
  • group "cannot tolerate any delay between its
    desires and the fulfillment of what it desires.
  • it brings about a regression toward the
    immaturity of primitivism.

37
Greatness??
  • However in instances where the individual is able
    to master it through understanding, as Job did,
    suffering may ultimately be good. For though,
    like medical treatment, it is painful, suffering
    may lead to a higher level of consciousness and a
    more sensitive, realistic awareness of the nature
    and meaning of existence. Indeed all maturation,
    all self-discovery, is in the last analysis more
    or less painful.

38
Greatness??
  • the wonder of great art is this that through it
    we can approach this highest level of
    consciousness and understanding without paying
    the painful price exacted in real life and
    without risking the dissolution of the self which
    real suffering might bring.

39
?????????
  • moral values and
  • Moral values deal with what will probably be good
    or bad for men taken as a group
  • a normative, relativistic view in which values
    change from culture to culture and from group to
    group within the culture
  • individual values.
  • Individual values are concerned with experience
    as it relates to particular men and women
  • a universal view of value, though recognizing
    that ultimate value goals may be reached by
    somewhat different means in different cultures.
    Indeed it is because the individual dimension of
    value is universal that, where translation is
    possible (as it is not in music), one is able to
    enjoy and value art

40
?????????
  • moral values and
  • Moral values deal with what will probably be good
    or bad for men taken as a group
  • a normative, relativistic view in which values
    change from culture to culture and from group to
    group within the culture
  • individual values.
  • Individual values are concerned with experience
    as it relates to particular men and women
  • a universal view of value, though recognizing
    that ultimate value goals may be reached by
    somewhat different means in different cultures.
    Indeed it is because the individual dimension of
    value is universal that, where translation is
    possible (as it is not in music), one is able to
    enjoy and value art
  • aesthetic value a part of moral value ???

41
John Keats
  • Man is originally a poor forked creature subject
    to the same mischances as the beasts of the
    forest, destined to hardships and disquietude of
    some kind or other.. . . The common cognomen of
    this world among the misguided and superstitious
    is "a vale of tears" from which we are to be
    redeemed by a certain arbitrary interposition of
    God and taken to heaven. What a little
    circumscribed straightened notion I Call the
    world if you please "the vale of Soul-making."
    Then you will find out the use of the world.. . .
    I say "soul making1'-Soul as distinguished from
    Intelligence. There may be intelligences or
    sparks of the divinity in millions--but they are
    not souls till they acquire identities, till each
    one is personally itself.. . . How then are Souls
    made?. . . . How but by the medium of a world
    like this?. . . . I will call the world a School
    instituted for the purpose of teaching little
    children how to read-I will call the human heart
    the horn book read in that school-and I will call
    the Child able to read, the Soul made from that
    School and its horn book. Do you not see how
    necessary a World of Pains and troubles is to
    school an Intelligence and make it a soul? A
    place where the heart must feel and suffer in a
    thousand diverse ways.. . . As various as the
    Lives of Men are-so various become their souls,
    and thus does God make individual beings.. . ."
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