Musical Concerns: Essays in Philosophy of MusicThis volume presents a new collection of essays, all of them dealing with music, by Jerrold Levinson, one of the most prominent philosophers of art today. It follows in the line of Levinson's earlier collections, Music, Art, and Metaphysics (1990), The Pleasures of Aesthetics (1996), and Contemplating Art (2006), and is representative of the most stimulating work being done under the rubric of analytic aesthetics. The essays, which are wide-ranging, should appeal to aestheticians, philosophers, musicologists, music theorists, music critics and music lovers of all kinds. Three of the twelve essays comprising the volume have not previously been published, and in somewhat of a departure for Levinson, four of the essays focus on music in the jazz tradition. |
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... question of whether there are varieties of shame specific to music, and offer a simple taxonomy of such following the different roles involved in the musical situation. In the final section of the essay I address the more traditional ...
... question of whether there are varieties of shame specific to music, and offer a simple taxonomy of such following the different roles involved in the musical situation. In the final section of the essay I address the more traditional ...
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... question I try to identify what is specific to jazz—or at least, to mainstream or unequivocal instances of jazz—from the point of view of expression. I address the vexing question of the essence or defining characteristics of jazz, and ...
... question I try to identify what is specific to jazz—or at least, to mainstream or unequivocal instances of jazz—from the point of view of expression. I address the vexing question of the essence or defining characteristics of jazz, and ...
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... of the larger, more heterogeneous one that I originally had in mind. And lastly, I thank Rowena Anketell for her excellent and constructive copyediting. 1 Philosophy and Music A curious question, how philosophy and INTRODUCTION.
... of the larger, more heterogeneous one that I originally had in mind. And lastly, I thank Rowena Anketell for her excellent and constructive copyediting. 1 Philosophy and Music A curious question, how philosophy and INTRODUCTION.
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Essays in Philosophy of Music Jerrold Levinson. 1. Philosophy. and. Music. A curious question, how philosophy and music are related. One might as well ask, it would seem, about the relation between philosophy and magic, or the relation ...
Essays in Philosophy of Music Jerrold Levinson. 1. Philosophy. and. Music. A curious question, how philosophy and music are related. One might as well ask, it would seem, about the relation between philosophy and magic, or the relation ...
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... question, it can still give pause to those of us who philosophize for a living. For the picture of philosophy conjured up by Haydn's movement is a plodding and earnest one, the product, in the main, of a slow walking bass and some ...
... question, it can still give pause to those of us who philosophize for a living. For the picture of philosophy conjured up by Haydn's movement is a plodding and earnest one, the product, in the main, of a slow walking bass and some ...
Contents
The Aesthetic Appreciation of Music | |
Concatenationism Architectonicism and the Appreciation of Music | |
Indication Abstraction and Individuation | |
Musical Beauty | |
Values of Music | |
Shame in General and Shame in Music | |
Jazz Vocal Interpretation | |
Popular Song as Moral Microcosm | |
The Expressive Specificity of Jazz | |
Instrumentation and Improvisation | |
What Is a Temporal Art? | |
Index | |
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Common terms and phrases
action aesthetic appreciation aesthetic experience aesthetic value Alperson appreciation of music architectonic art form artistic indication artistic value artworks ashamed aspect basic musical understanding beautiful music Beethoven’s character characterized claim clearly composers composition concatenationism convey course dance distinctive effect emotional engagement essay ethical quality example feel film Gabriel Fauré Handmaid’s Tale hear improvisation indicated structures instance instrument involved Ithaca jazz standard jazz vocal interpretation John Coltrane Journal of Aesthetics Kivy Kivy’s label least Levinson listener melody mind moral force motion movement musical beauty Musical Expressiveness musical improvisation narrowly beautiful music Ninth Symphony novel object one’s Oxford perception performer’s performing personality perhaps Peter Kivy philosophy piano piece of music quasi-hearing question reflection regard Roger Scruton Scruton sense shame simply singer singing sonata sonata form song song’s Sophisticated Lady sort specific String Quartet suggest Symphony temporal art thing timbre tonal value of music