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Music Numinous and Mathematics. Form and Analysis Through Fourier Space PDF

950 Pages·2018·85.39 MB·English
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Computational Music Science Series editor Eva Li Music Numinous and Mathematics Form and Analysis Through Fourier Space Edited by Eva Li "Music: Numinous and Mathematics. Form and Analysis Through Fourier Space" Edited by Eva Li Stole src from http://avxhome.se/blogs/exLib/ Published by ExLi4EvaLi Copyright © 2018 All chapters are Open Access distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license, which allows users to download, copy and build upon published articles even for commercial purposes, as long as the author and publisher are properly credited, which ensures maximum dissemination and a wider impact of our publications. After this work has been published, authors have the right to republish it, in whole or part, in any publication of which they are the author, and to make other personal use of the work. Any republication, referencing or personal use of the work must explicitly identify the original source. As for readers, this license allows users to download, copy and build upon published chapters even for commercial purposes, as long as the author and publisher are properly credited, which ensures maximum dissemination and a wider impact of our publications. Notice Statements and opinions expressed in the chapters are these of the individual contributors and not necessarily those of the editors or publisher. No responsibility is accepted for the accuracy of information contained in the published chapters. The publisher assumes no responsibility for any damage or injury to persons or property arising out of the use of any materials, instructions, methods or ideas contained in the book. Publishing Process Manager Technical Editor AvE4EvA MuViMix Records, Atuona Cover Designer Спизжено у ExLib: avxhm.se/blogs/exLib ISBN-10: 404-81-9705-3 Stole src from http://avxhm.se/blogs/exLib: ISBN-13: 978-404-81-9705-2 Спизжено у ExLib: avxhm.se/blogs/exLib Contents Part I. Music and the Numinous Introduction 1 The Transcendental and Rational Discourse Music 2 as Sublime Organism 3 Process Philosophy 4 Music and Process 5 A Whiteheadian Aesthetic and a Musical Paradigm 6 Music, the Other Arts and Process Part II. From Pythagoras to Fractals Music and mathematics: an overview 1 Music and mathematics through history 2 The mathematics of musical sound 3 Mathematical structure in music 4 The composer speaks Part III. Form and Analysis: Time, Pattern, Proportion PRELUDE: Why Analysis? 1 TIME: The Motivating Forces PATTERN: 2 The Shaping Factors PROPORTION: The 3 Distinguishing Features POSTLUDE: METAFORM: Beyond Formal Analysis ANTHOLOGY: MUSIC FOR ANALYSIS Part IV. Discrete Fourier Transform in Music Theory 1 Discrete Fourier Transform of Distributions 2 Homometry and the Phase Retrieval Problem 3 Nil Fourier Coefficients and Tilings Saliency 4 Continuous Spaces, Continuous FT 5 Phases of Fourier Coefficients 6 Conclusion 7 Annexes and Tables 8 Music and the Numinous by Richard Elfyn Jones Contents Preface 5 Introduction 11 Chapter 1: The Transcendental and Rational Discourse 21 Chapter 2: Music as Sublime Organism 43 Chapter 3: Process Philosophy 63 Chapter 4: Music and Process 73 Chapter 5: A Whiteheadian Aesthetic and a Musical Paradigm 85 Chapter 6: Music, the Other Arts and Process 95 Conclusion 107 Selected Bibliography 117 Index 119 Preface The lines of thought that joined my interest in music and the arts with my enquiries into metaphysics began to emerge some twelve years ago. However, since childhood I have been aware that, as a keyboard player, making music was for me essentially a form of philosophising (carried out, I hope, spontaneously and instinctively rather than in any over-ambitious manner). Early memories of recorded performances by Schnabel, Solomon, Arrau and Brendel served to instil a restless curiosity about what comprises the real essence of the musical art. This book therefore aims to explore music, and to a lesser degree the other arts, in a somewhat unusual way by relating it directly to its ontological roots. For many years I have been a proponent of Process philosophy. Process philosophy is derived from and inspired by the writings, grand in scope and bold in application, of Alfred North Whitehead (1861- 1947). In works like Religion in the Making, Adventures of Ideas, Science and the Modern World and especially Process and Reality he formulated a metaphysics applicable to all aspects of life. His system is intrinsically interdisciplinary and interrelational. All individual beings, from God to the most insignificant thing, are explained through Whitehead’s set of metaphysical concepts. The philosophy’s influence has been wide-ranging, especially in the USA. From the middle of last century many American theologians embraced Process as a tool for developing a new Christian natural theology whereby ideas of God as an absolute predestinator, or as a “being- itself”, was rejected in favour of a more world-affirming theism. The concept of the numinous is obviously central to theology as well as to other contemporary expressions of Christian faith. But this book has little to say about theological perspectives. The numinous is defined by me as pertaining to the numen or the supernatural. Although this 6 Preface essentially Kantian idea of the numinous as a category for understanding religion was developed forcefully and somewhat mystically by the theologian Rudolf Otto, this book avoids theological arguments. On the contrary it adheres to the basic tenets of Whitehead’s metaphysics as expounded in Process and Reality. In choosing not to examine any Biblical and confessional gloss on Process that appeared after Whitehead’s time I accept the general character of Whitehead’s teaching and apply that to a specific example of reality which we value, namely music. Naturally, such is the generality of Whiteheadian Process that other aspects of reality could just as easily have been chosen. It is inevitable therefore that our discussion should be as broad based as possible. The reason Whitehead is not discussed until Chapter 3 and afterwards is because the Introduction and the first Chapter provide a historical preview recalling the pervasiveness of ideas of process in Western thought since the time of the Greeks. In providing these two introductory chapters we are also reminded that it was Whitehead himself who proclaimed that famous judgement on Western philosophy, namely, that it is all merely footnotes to Plato. The Introduction presents an oblique approach to the subject through links between art and mystical and esoteric theories. Joscelyn Godwin’s Harmonies of Heaven and Earth is a rich compendium of ancient beliefs about music’s magical powers and the connections between its mathematical substructures and the architecture of the universe. I am indebted to this source for many intriguing facts that are discussed in this chapter. The Introduction provides a critical pot- pourri of what Godwin terms “speculative music” preparatory to the more important approaches which will be discussed later. In Chapter 1 “The Transcendental and Rational Discourse”, there is an inevitably succinct review of Process’s indebtedness to Plato, Plotinus, St. Augustine, St. Thomas Aquinas and some later writers before focussing on Schopenhauer’s important hypotheses on music’s capacity to lead to a transcendental reality. It was Mendelssohn who, in a famous letter, pointed out that, far from being an abstract art music is the most particular. Our examination of the materials of Western music must therefore be technical, but without analysing pieces of music in a conventional manner. Chapter 2, “Music as Sublime Organism”, provides a detailed examination of theories by the Austrian musicologist Victor

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