Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 January 2010
Summary
On learning that i was working on a phenomenology of music making, one philosopher commented to me that, although he was also a musician, he had never wanted to think philosophically about music. He was worried that it might diminish the pleasure he derived from playing and listening to music. Somehow it was impossible to miss the hint of a suggestion that I follow his example.
No doubt there are ways of thinking and writing about music that could have that effect. Sometimes it seems that philosophers have lost sight of the musical experience itself, so that music ends up being treated as an ontological puzzle. For instance, although Roman Ingarden in many ways comes close to capturing the musical experience, toward the end of his life he made the astonishing admission that the primary focus of his phenomenology of music had not really been that of understanding music at all. Or in his own words: “The specifically aesthetic questions were to me at that time of secondary importance.” Ingarden's real concern was instead with the issue of realism versus idealism – and the work of art was just a particularly useful test case. Precisely this focus may help explain why, even though Ingarden's Ontology of the Work of Art purports to be a phenomenology of art works (including not merely musical works but also paintings, architecture, and film) and thus presumably guided by what Edmund Husserl termed the “things themselves” [die Sachen selbst], his real concern is to show that musical works remain “untouched” by performances.
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- Information
- The Improvisation of Musical DialogueA Phenomenology of Music, pp. ix - xivPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003