1st Edition

Music, Performance, Meaning Selected Essays

By Nicholas Cook Copyright 2007

    This selection of sixteen of Nicholas Cook's essays covers the period from 1987 to 2004 and brings out the development of the author's ideas over these years. In particular the two keywords of the title -Meaning and Performance- represent critical directions that expand to the point that, by the end of the book, they become coextensive: music is seen as social action and meaning as created by that action. Within this overall direction, a wide variety of topics is explored, ranging from Beethoven to Schenker, from Chinese qin music to jazz and rock, from perceptual psychology to sketch studies and analysis of record sleeves. A substantial introduction draws out the links (and differences) between the essays, sometimes critiquing them and always setting them into the developing context of the author's work as a whole.

    Contents: Introduction; Published writings; Musical form and the listener; The perception of large-scale tonal closure; Beethoven's unfinished piano concerto: a case of double vision?; Schenker's theory of music as ethics; The editor and the virtuoso, or Schenker vs. Bülow; Heinrich Schenker, polemicist: a reading of the 9th symphony monograph; Music minus 1: rock, theory and performance; The domestic gesamtkunstwerk, or record sleeves and reception; At the borders of musical identity: Schenker, Corelli and the Graces; Theorizing musical meaning; Form and syntax: a tale of 2 terms; The other Beethoven: heroism, the canon and the works of 1813-14; Performance writ large: desultory remarks on furnishing the abode of the retired scholar; In praise of symbolic poverty; Writing on music or axes to grind: road rage and musical community; Making music together, or improvisation and its others; Index.

    Biography

    Nicholas Cook is Professor of Music, University of Cambridge, UK