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The Power of Sound
One of the most important and original treatises on musical aesthetics, first published in 1880.
Edmund Gurney (Author)
9781108038638, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 20 October 2011
578 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 3.3 cm, 0.84 kg
Edmund Gurney (1847–88) is today best known for his work on psychical research, but from a young age he harboured the ambition to be a composer and performer. Frustrated in this aim, he began writing on the philosophy and psychology of music. This work of 1880 was an attempt to apply a strictly scientific method of enquiry to music, and it is regarded as one of the most important and original treatises from the nineteenth century on musical aesthetics. Gurney discusses the sensations of pleasure and pain in relation to the senses, and goes on to examine how the listener differentiates between 'noises' and 'tones'. He explores whether there is an elemental difference between a 'good' and a 'bad' melody, the ultimate futility of the critic trying to describe music, and the 'moral' conclusion to be drawn from a preference for the music of Rossini over that of Beethoven.
Preface
1. The organs and impressions of the higher senses
2. Unformed sound
3. The elements of a work of art
4. Abstract form as addressed to the eye
5. Abstract form as addressed to the ear
6. Association
7. The factors of melodic form
8. Melodic forms and the ideal motion
9. The relations of reason and order to beauty
10. Further remarks on musical form and 'subject'
11. Polyphony and harmony
12. Material and colour
13. The two ways of hearing music
14. Music as impressive and music as expressive
15. The suggestion by music of external objects and ideas
16. Music in relation to intellect and morality
17. Further peculiarities of music's nature and position
18. Music in relation to the public
19. The sound-element in verse
20. Song
21. The speech theory
22. Opera
23. Musical criticism
Appendices.
Subject Areas: Music [AV]