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New Paths: Aspects of Music Theory and Aesthetics in the Age of Romanticism PDF

136 Pages·2009·6.61 MB·English
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newPathsDef 19-06-2009 00:48 Pagina 1 NEW PATHS newPathsDef 19-06-2009 00:48 Pagina 2 This seventh publication in the series “Collected Writings of the Orpheus Institute” is edited by Darla Crispin newPathsDef 19-06-2009 00:48 Pagina 3 NEW PATHS Aspects of Music Theory and Aesthetics in the Age of Romanticism John Neubauer Janet Schmalfeldt Scott Burnham Susan Youens Jim Samson COLLECTED WRITINGS OF THE O R P H E U S INSTITUTE Leuven University Press 2009 newPathsDef 19-06-2009 00:48 Pagina 4 newPathsDef 19-06-2009 00:48 Pagina 5 CONTENTS éêÉÑ~ÅÉ Fresh tracks, retracings and diverions / éKMT — John Neubauer Organicism and Music Theory / éKNN — Janet Schmalfeldt Beethoven’s “Bridgetower” Sonata, Op. 47 / éKPT — Scott Burnham Intimacy and Impersonality in Late Beethoven: Contrast and the Staging of Subjectivity / éKSV — Susan Youens Of Epigones, Aftermaths, and Achievement: The Heine Songs of Franz Lachner / éKUR — Jim Samson Chopin and the Traditions of Pedagogy / éKNNR éÉêëçå~äá~ / éKNOV ÅçäçéÜçå / éKNPR newPathsDef 19-06-2009 00:48 Pagina 6 newPathsDef 19-06-2009 00:48 Pagina 7 FRESH TRACKS, RETRACINGS AND DIVERIONS The title New Paths will always be associated with Robert Schumann’s coinage of the phrase—“Neue Bahnen”—as the title of his article in the Neue Zeitschrift für Musikfor October NURPwhich encapsulated his view of the way forward for German music. This important piece is now remembered for its near-prophetic state- ment that an as-yet unpublished composer, Johannes Brahms, would compose a body of musical works that would come to embody an ideal of musical expression perfectly fitting for its times. Perhaps less presciently, given the benefit of hindsight, Schumann also listed in a footnote other “significant talents”, namely Joseph Joachim, Ernst Naumann, Ludwig Normann, Woldemar Bangiel, Theodore Kirchner, Julius Schaeffer “not to forget that profound aspirant to great art C. F. Wilsing”. Niels Gade, C. F. Mangold, Robert Franz and Stephen Heller are also credited as “bravely advancing heralds”. Schumann’s key purpose in this article was to counterpoise his vision of the future to that of the then editor of the Neue Zeitschrift, Franz Brendel. Brendel was a strong advocate of the New German School gathered around Franz Liszt in Weimar. In November NUROI he had published an article of his own suggesting that a “rosy dawn of the future” was detectable in Weimar whereas elsewhere was to be found only “our epoch in its death throes”.1 As the founder of the Neue Zeitschrift, Schumann clearly felt the need to rebalance the pro-Lisztian bias of its current editor, but it is far from uncharacter- istic of history that it is the response we now remember, not the stimulus that provoked it. With this in mind, it is apt that the five intriguing and unusual articles grouped here under the title New Paths each invite us to re-enter the ostensibly familiar territory of nineteenth-century scholarship in a fresh and re-contextualising manner. They do this variously: by retracing the historical contexts within which key musical terms evolved; by illuminating novel 1.Franz Brendel, “Ein dritter Ausflug nach Weimar”, Neue Zeitschrift für Musik, (NURO), p.OOR. 7 newPathsDef 19-06-2009 00:48 Pagina 8 Darla Crispin aspects of well-known compositions; by uncovering little-known materials pertaining to composers of the canon; or by re-appraising largely obscure musical figures who merit deeper consideration. Schumann’s critical writing formed in total a kind of idealistic artistic manifesto, one in which art was viewed as a means for human betterment, and one in critical writing itself should form part of this great enterprise of progress. Little wonder, then, that music theory and musicology have frequently taken up the term “New Paths” when reflecting back upon Schumann’s own compo- sitional and critical life projects. In this collection, however, Schumann is an éminence grise whose influence is implicit rather than explicit. The volume does not directly address Schumann, but is a compilation of post-millennial musings on a broader range of issues concerning critical theory as it pertains to nine- teenth-century Western music. It revisits some of the figures of the canon—Beethoven, Schubert and Chopin, but does so via crit- icism which is informed by contemporary concerns, especially those of musical practice. The “New Paths” traced by the various articles are signposted in a corresponding variety of ways, reflect- ing the volume’s broad interdisciplinary approach. This is an approach which lies at the heart of the work of the Orpheus Institute and informs its full range of activities—postgraduate education programmes, seminars and research. Every year, the Orpheus Institute holds its International Orpheus Academy for Music & Theory. In OMMR, the Academy, brought together music theoreticians and analysts to share some of their cur- rent preoccupations about nineteenth century music within a research environment that focused specifically upon questions con- cerning musical creation, as part of the wider discourse on “research in-and-through musical practice”. New Paths collates and records the contributions of the principal speakers at the OMMRAcademy: John Neubauer (University of Amsterdam), Janet Schmalfeldt (Tufts University), Scott Burnham (Princeton University), Susan Youens (University of Notre Dame) and Jim Samson (Royal Holloway, University of London). Reflecting the nature of this gath- ering of individuals, New Paths does not display a uniformly “tra- ditional” approach to music analysis, but offers a series of insights that can challenge and surprise us. 8 newPathsDef 19-06-2009 00:48 Pagina 9 Preface John Neubauer’s comprehensive text, “Organicism and Music Theory” forms an ideal opening to the collection. Organicism is a key trope in the discussion of nineteenth century music; indeed, as Neubauer points out, the term remains relevant to us, long past an age in which it was in seemingly perfect alignment with the musical Zeitgeist. Neubauer provides a searching review of the lit- erature on organicism, from the writings of antiquity to the pres- ent day. In doing so, he reminds us of just how central debates upon the subject have been in music theory, and how important an evolving definition remains, even in the post-modern age. In the first of two articles on Ludwig van Beethoven, Janet Schmalfeldt examines the musical evolution of theSonata for Violin and Piano Op. 47—the so-called “Kreutzer Sonata”— through the work of one of Beethoven’s collaborators, the renowned virtuoso violinist, George Augustus Polgreen Bridgetower. In her article, “Beethoven’s ‘Bridgetower’ Sonata, Op. 47”, as well as providing Bridgetower with the recognition that would seem to be his due, she provides specific insights into how the relationship between violin- ist and pianist/composer was catalytic in the genesis of the work, and in doing so, raises more general points about the nature of col- laborations between composers and performers, especially when the composer is also a performing partner. In “Intimacy and Impersonality in Late Beethoven: Contrast and the Staging of Subjectivity” Scott Burnham presents a challenge to aficionados of Beethoven’s late works, by considering afresh how these compositions embody the juxtaposition of the monumental and the personal. By doing so, he asserts that we will find new ways to read these works, and that these may go beyond the more generally accepted view of the late works as articulating an aes- thetic of fragmentation. Susan Youens interprets the “New Paths” theme as an invitation to shine a light upon a little-known musical figure. She makes a series of compelling arguments in support of her view that certain of the songs of Franz Lachner may stand alongside those of Franz Schubert as worthy examples of the “early nineteenth-century architects of sound who sought to extend the limits of the Lied”. Finally, Jim Samson’s intriguing study of the many influences imparted to the young Frédéric Chopin through his teacher Józef 9

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In New Paths, five renowned scholars discuss a variety of topics related to Romanticism, focusing especially on the years 1800–1840. In a much-needed historical and critical overview of the concept of organicism, John Neubauer ranges from its origins in Enlightenment biology to its aftermath in po
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