Lecture 1 Handout MU5500 MMus Skills in Advanced Musical Studies
Lecture 1 Handout MU5500 MMus Skills in Advanced Musical Studies
“The fact that musicologists are themselves musicians, but perhaps not among the best, may have
something to do with attitudes among performers and composers: musicologists, they believe, should
be supporting their efforts, but in practice act as a kind of police requiring them to toe the line in their
knowledge of insignificant music and in their adherence to authentic performance practice.”
Musicologists take “measure of what is good and not, extension of history, sociology, anthropology,
physics in musical version, how one should or not perform a work, one moment irrelevant to creation
and practice of music; another moment completely worked into it.”
Musicologists often “see themselves as advocates of certain musics – the best, or their own, or the
neglected.”
Kay Kaufman Shelemay in 1996: ‘While I applaud its efforts, the new musicology; seems not so
startlingly new, at least not to someone familiar with the last half century of ethnomgy research, not to
mention considerable earlier work in historical mgy itself that negaged fully with issues relating to
culture, society and politics. I am delighted hat new mgy has moved full force to considerations of
music and culture, but I marvel at the oversight of decades of emgy scholarship long concerned with
the same themes.’
4d. Triaging of Musicology with Ethnomusicology today?
- Nicholas Cook: marriage broker?
- Jonathan Stock: musicologists still a different people; not ready yet to join ethno ranks
- Nettl: Historian feels scholar’s own aesthetic judgment of musical composition and performance are
central concerns, ethnomusicologist feels evaluation has no place in musicology.
If the White man studying Indian raag is an ethnomusicologist, what of Japanese performer of Chopin?
- Cook, via Nathan Glazer’s ideas on additive vs transformative multiculturalism; the need to
recalibrate the field
- Georgina Born on relational musicology: we’re all too different; keep the multiple spaces alive via 3
relationships: integrative-synthesizing; subordination; antagonistic-agnostic
- four cornerstones: 1. Social 2. Technological 3. temporal 4. ontological
Michelle Lekas: 'Any efforts to transform a relatively new discipline into an august and accepted field -
a field suggestive of, say, musicology - risks instantiation that effecively depoliticizes, and thus erases,
both our hope for and our suspicion of the object of study itself.'
Problems of interdisciplinarity: use sexy terms without knowing what they mean, de Certeau on ‘soft
interdisciplinarity’
9. Clearing the decks and recalibrating from the position of a naif - Phil Bohlman
1. My Musc/ Your Music
2. Our Music/ Their Music
3. Music Out There/ Music in the Numbers
4. Music in Nature/ The Naturalness of Music
5. Music as Science
6. Music as a Language/ Embedded in Language?
7. Die Musik/ Musics
8. The Voice of God/ The Struggle of Everyday
9. In the Notes Outside the Notes
10. In Time/ Outside Time
11. Authentic Sound/ Recorded Sound
12. In the Body/ Beyond the Body
10. What Next? Where do YOU go from here? Where do WE go from here?