ABSTRACT

First Published in 1979. This book represents the work done by its author to begin to lay the ground musically and philosophically for enormous tasks that still remain to be done and may require a team of researchers in various fields relating to experiential phenomena. Coming from a background of musicological studies as well as active musical performance, the author's orientation is different from that of the professional philosopher as such, who is apt to understand sound phenomena in more generalized manner rather than addressing himself to specifics in music and music theory. These essays trace the path taken by the author in the last years and are studies that were a necessary prelude to a systematic work on the philosophy of musical sound, a work that is in preparation. Most important has been the attempt to show the qualitative steps taken from Helmholtz through German and French phenomenology to the beginnings of a dialectic of musical sound.

chapter Chapter 1|16 pages

Prelude to a Phenomonology of Music

chapter Chapter 2|38 pages

A Critique of Visual Metaphor in Philosophy and Music

chapter Chapter 3|26 pages

Working Propositions in Sound: A Baroque Suite

chapter Chapter 5|24 pages

Cartesian Theory and Musical Science

chapter Chapter 6|22 pages

Musicology in Need of New Horizons

chapter Chapter 9|14 pages

Implications of Phenomenology for Music Education

chapter Chapter 10|15 pages

Phenomenological Theme with Dialectical Variation