ABSTRACT

Kevin Korsyn is a renowned music theorist, musicologist, and pedagogue who has taught at the University of Michigan since 1992. He has published widely and influentially in areas as diverse as Beethoven and Brahms studies, chromatic tonality, disciplinarity and metatheory, history of theory, musical meaning and hermeneutics, poststructuralism (deconstruction, intertextuality, etc.), and Schenkerian theory and analysis. Because of the scope and caliber of his published work, and also his legacy as a pedagogue, Korsyn has had a profound impact on the field of music theory, along with the related fields of historical musicology and aesthetics.

This book, a festschrift for Korsyn, comprises essays that constellate around his numerous scholarly foci. Represented in the volume are not only familiar music-theoretical topics such as chromaticism, form, Schenker, and text-music relations, but also various interdisciplinary topics such as deconstruction, disability studies, German Idealism, posthumanism, and psychoanalysis. The book thus reflects the increasingly multifaceted intellectual landscape of contemporary music theory.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

part I|56 pages

Close Reading and the Problematics of Analysis

chapter 1|25 pages

Extraordinary Measures

Disability and Metrical Conflict in Schubert's “Der blinde Knabe”

part II|57 pages

Compositional Constraints and Compositional Process

chapter 4|15 pages

Take It Away

How Shortened and Missing Sections Energize Rondo Forms

chapter 5|40 pages

“All-Comprehending” Invertible Counterpoint

Bach's Fugue in G minor from Book 2 of The Well-Tempered Clavier

part III|139 pages

Music and Interdisciplinarity

chapter 7|29 pages

Walter Riezler on the Unity of the Arts

Unsiloing Art and Music in the Weimar Era

chapter 8|70 pages

Completing the Triad

Schenker and Kantian Practical Philosophy 1