Prospectus

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What is Music

Course
2012-2013

Description

This course is an introduction to one of the most basic questions in the philosophy of music. The course includes an historical overview, though most attention will go to contemporary, (late) 20th-century ideas about the problems and (im)possibilities to define music.
What is ‘music’? A complex amalgam of melody, harmony, rhythm, timbre and silence in a particular (intended) structure (Hanslick)? A sonoric event between noise and silence (Attali)? A ‘total social fact’ (Molino)? Something in which truth has set itself to work (Heidegger)?
Music. In the first place a word. As a word, it has meaning. As a word, it gives meaning. Take sounds for example: this sound is music. Which actually conveys: ‘we’ consider this sound as music. Music – as word – frames, delimits, opens up, encloses. To call (‘consecrate’ as Pierre Bourdieu would say) something music is a political decision-making process. As a grammatical concept, ‘music’ is useful: using this concept, we differentiate between various sounds. We divide, classify, categorize, name, delimit: not every sound is music. Although, since Cage, no single sound is by definition banned from the musical domain. The word ‘music’ brings (necessary) structure and order into the (audible) world.
But, there is also an other music; there is a ‘musical dimension’ that is much more difficult to capture in words. This dimension might be indicated as ‘the sensual’, something which can and should (at least according to S? Kierkegaard) only be expressed in its immediacy. This immediate – perhaps one could also speak of ‘the physical’ – is erased at the moment when it, through reflection, would be conceptualized; it is by definition indefinable and therefore unreachable by means of language. There is thus something in music which can only be expressed through or as music. The moment that language tries to pinpoint this something, it dissolves and is lost.
So, is it possible at all to define – that is: to incorporate into a linguistic category – music?

Timetable

Second semester. Classes take place at Lipsiusbuilding (Cleveringaplaats 1, Leiden), room ’203, on Mondays from 15.00 – 17.00. First lecture: February 4.

Mode of instruction

Lectures, seminars.

Assessment method

Schriftelijke en mondelinge opdrachten.

Reading list

Authors whos texts are discussed: Plato, Eduard Hanslick, Jean-Jacques Nattiez, Howard Becker, Martin Heidegger, Jacques Derrida, Richard Littlefield, Jacques Attali.
Music of Bach, John Cage and John Zorn.

Registration

NB: this course is NOT listed in Usis. Students are obliged to register for this course through the application form that can be downloaded via this link.

Application form

Contact

Tim Soekkha
Dr. Marcel Cobussen