Artigo Revisado por pares

THE DISCOURSE OF SOUND

2016; Cambridge University Press; Volume: 70; Issue: 277 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1017/s0040298216000152

ISSN

1478-2286

Autores

Martin Kaltenecker,

Tópico(s)

Music History and Culture

Resumo

Abstract This article offers a short overview of the development of listening theories concerning Western art music since the end of the eighteenth century. Referring to Michel Foucault, I consider such theories as discourses which produce ‘power effects', such as the training of listening attitudes, or the construction of specific spaces, such as the Festspielhaus in Bayreuth. During the eighteenth century, predominant discourses considered musical pieces as orations and, since the nineteenth century, as complex organisms or structures. In the last third of the twentieth century a focus on sound, evinced for instance by the field of ‘sound studies', has produced a new configuration that dissolves the prevailing model of structural listening. This perspective may shed light on some technical features of contemporary compositional styles, which I examine by considering the use of melodies, gestures and loops in two compositions by Fausto Romitelli and Simon Steen-Andersen.

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