ABSTRACT

Where is the academic study of music today, and what paths should it take into the future? Should we be looking at how music relates to society and constructs meaning through it, rather than how it transcends the social? Can we ‘remix’ our discipline and attempt to address all musics on an equal basis, without splitting ourselves in advance into subgroups of ‘musicologists’, ‘theorists’, and ‘ethnomusicologists’? These are some of the crucial issues that Nicholas Cook has raised since he emerged in the 1990s as one of the UK’s leading and most widely read voices in critical musicology. In this book, collaborators and former students of Cook pursue these questions and others raised by his work—from notation, historiography, and performance to the place of music in multimedia forms such as virtual reality and video games, analysing both how it can bring people together and the ways in which it has failed to do so.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

A hedgehog in fox’s clothing

part I|95 pages

Media, notation, and performance

chapter 1|13 pages

Transforming musical (multi)media

Virtual reality and the goals of music research in the twenty-first-century humanities

chapter 3|14 pages

‘A repertoire of means for imagining music’

Notation cultures and the musical imagination

chapter 4|15 pages

Rethinking classical sound recordings

Creativities beyond the score

chapter 5|15 pages

Between practice and theory

Performance studies and/as artistic research

part II|97 pages

Meanings and values in history

chapter 7|16 pages

Vocality, orality, and disciplinarity

A case study of gendered categorizations in the ancient Near East

chapter 8|17 pages

‘All this requires but a moment of open revelation’!

Johann Gottfried Herder, Robert Lachmann, and the global musicological moment

chapter 9|16 pages

Duetting with Bartók and others

Iva Bittová’s post-revival ‘personal folk music’

chapter 10|16 pages

Writing on living composers and the problem of advocacy

Failure and the experimental work of Mauricio Kagel 1

chapter 11|14 pages

Music and epistemological humility

Looking back to (and forward with) Paul Bekker

chapter 12|16 pages

Towards an ecological history of music

chapter |6 pages

Afterword

Knowing Nick