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CENTRO STUDI ERIC SAMS per la ricerca sul Lied tedesco
Direttore Erik Battaglia
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The
Why of Music: dialogues in an unexplored region of appreciation
by Donald N. Ferguson.
Musicians argue under two heads - (a) music expresses emotion (Mozart) and (b) music cannot possibly express emotion (Stravinsky). Aesthetically speaking, one head is better than two; and Susanne Langer has knocked both together by her famous synthesis - music symbolizes knowledge of emotion. Her theory however requires a work of art to be a single indivisible symbol without small-scale expressive components (so those who analyse music can't really understand it - verb sap). Yet analysis and appreciation should be compatible; music's gravity must be related to its attraction. This calls for a unified field theory applicable both to the art-work in its totality and to its motivic components. Professor Ferguson's answer is the concept of “concern”. If he is right, a lot of small independent concerns combine in the whole great business of living as incorporated in music. He pursues this thesis down dale and up hill, or from Bach to Berg, through 300 years and pages, in the unusual form of imaginary conversations between the author and friends. There are chapters on eg the musical image, composition, performance, style, Bach, Haydn and Mozart, Beethoven (3), song, the leading-motive, greatness in music. The argument is (briefly) that although musical and emotional tensions are analogous, music portrays neither the experience of emotion nor its object, but the concern - the emotional attitude-thus aroused. Thee Why of music lies in its reference to human experience. This image of experience is expressed in a musical phrase, and can also be expressed in a verbal phrase. For example, the first eight bars of Beethoven's C minor violin sonata can sensibly be described in such terms as a reaction to an offence, an appeal to the general conscience, and the like.
If
so, then notes of music and notes on music are both legal tender-a
reassuring thought for those who utter the latter. Indeed, everyone
will agree that this book forges a bond in one sense or another. But
is it genuine? To judge this, we need a trial. The case for the
prosecution looks strong. There is evidence of carelessness
(Beethoven's “second sonata in F sharp minor”). The dialogue form
seems archaic; its elaborate variations tend to obscure the
theme; its antiphony invites antipathy. The imaginary interlocutor
goes “Mmmmm” too often, and might on occasion be forgiven for going “Zzzzz”.
The Minnesotan tradition of sturdy independence is taken too far. It
would surely have been better for the Professor to consult the German
faculty, or even the German dictionary, rather than get into the
curious tangle on pp. 209-15 about the meaning of a Mörike poem. And
it is sheer isolationism to relegate the whole vast literature of
musical aesthetics to one solitary footnote (p.295). The main region
of discourse, called “unexplored” in the book's subtitle, is about as
unexplored as
Now
the defence. First, the oversights are trivial and the insights
prodigious. The dialogue form is so archaic that it has become novel
and effective again. It makes the exposition of this complex and
difficult topic much more fluent and compelling than I have found it
in Professor Ferguson's other writing. Further, the dialogue form is
very apt for a work which is both academic and philosophical (as in
But no doubt the motive remains obscure and the verdict not proven. Whatever music is or does, it is by definition indefinable. We can only agree with the author's view that “words are but feeble symbols of the living state of mind portrayed in music”. Many tracks lead into that cave, but none come out. You may prefer not lo enter. But Professor Ferguson is in this respect a born troglodyte. And he has made this cave not only warmly welcoming but also richly rewarding-not just Adullam's but Aladdin's. It's well worth a visit, I'd say, even at 75s.
The Musical Times, Sept. 1969 (p. 937) © the estate of eric sams
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