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Education » Literary
Music as Thought: Listening to the Symphony in the Age of Beethoven by Mark Evan Bonds screenshot
English | Publisher: Princeton University Press, 2006 | 192 Pages | PDF | 2,3 MB
Before the nineteenth century, instrumental music was considered inferior to vocal music. Kant described wordless music as "more pleasure than culture," and Rousseau dismissed it for its inability to convey concepts. But by the early 1800s, a dramatic shift was under way. Purely instrumental music was now being hailed as a means to knowledge and embraced precisely because of its independence from the limits of language. What had once been perceived as entertainment was heard increasingly as a vehicle of thought. Listening had become a way of knowing.

Music as Thought traces the roots of this fundamental shift in attitudes toward listening in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Focusing on responses to the symphony in the age of Beethoven, Mark Evan Bonds draws on contemporary accounts and a range of sources--philosophical, literary, political, and musical--to reveal how this music was experienced by those who heard it first.

Music as Thought is a fascinating reinterpretation of the causes and effects of a revolution in listening.



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comments

  Resident 5.12.2012 814 21259
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  Resident 21.04.2014 1592
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Any university student of music will have to go through 'Immanuel Kant' and his idea of 'pure music', which influenced all the romantics, that is why Mendelssohn composed his 'Songs Without Words'.

I love these books, because it brings a lot of thought to many philosophers, so you draw a parallel between them. And for those who can't read because of cerebral laziness, it already brings everything chewed.

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