ABSTRACT

The conversations generated by the chapters in Music's Immanent Future grapple with some of music's paradoxes: that music of the Western art canon is viewed as timeless and universal while other kinds of music are seen as transitory and ephemeral; that in order to make sense of music we need descriptive language; that to open up the new in music we need to revisit the old; that to arrive at a figuration of music itself we need to posit its starting point in noise; that in order to justify our creative compositional works as research, we need to find critical languages and theoretical frameworks with which to discuss them; or that despite being an auditory system, we are compelled to resort to the visual metaphor as a way of thinking about musical sounds. Drawn to musical sound as a powerful form of non-verbal communication, the authors include musicologists, philosophers, music theorists, ethnomusicologists and composers. The chapters in this volume investigate and ask fundamental questions about how we think, converse, write about, compose, listen to and analyse music. The work is informed by the philosophy primarily of Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari, and secondarily of Michel Foucault, Julia Kristeva and Jean-Luc Nancy. The chapters cover a wide range of topics focused on twentieth and twenty-first century musics, covering popular musics, art music, acousmatic music and electro-acoustic musics, and including music analysis, music's ontology, the noise/music dichotomy, intertextuality and music, listening, ethnography and the current state of music studies. The authors discuss their philosophical perspectives and methodologies of practice-led research, including their own creative work as a form of research. Music's Immanent Future brings together empirical, cultural, philosophical and creative approaches that will be of interest to musicologists, composers, music analysts and music philosophers.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

part I|41 pages

The academic music machine

part II|57 pages

Deleuzian encounters

chapter 5|13 pages

Intra-active soundings

Becoming-woman, becoming-minor

chapter 6|18 pages

Chaotic mappings

On the ground with music

chapter 7|12 pages

Meeting the composer halfway

Which Anne Boyd?

chapter 8|13 pages

Schaeffer's sound effects

part III|53 pages

Materialities of sounding

chapter 9|8 pages

Applied aesthetics

chapter 10|14 pages

Living colours

An Asian-Pacific conceptual frame for composition

chapter 12|20 pages

A musical portmanteau

Rock viscerality, juxtaposition and modernist textures in Frumious

part IV|29 pages

Immanent listening

chapter 13|8 pages

Immanent listening

chapter 14|9 pages

Seeing the sense

Imagining a new approach to acousmatic music and listening

part V|19 pages

Deleuzian ontologies

chapter 16|6 pages

Musical becomings

chapter 17|12 pages

Material music

Speculations on non-human agency in music