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Silence and Slow Time
Martin Boykan
€ 121.05
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Description for Silence and Slow Time
Hardback. This text proposes a way of thinking about music that is faithful to the experience of playing or listening during a real performance. It refers to the rhythm of a piece, the way it shapes the succession of events, and the choice of details that can affect the way time appears to flow. Num Pages: 240 pages, 165 musical examples, footnotes, index. BIC Classification: AVA; AVGC. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 229 x 162 x 24. Weight in Grams: 476.
Time is of the essence in music because the ear can only perceive sequentially-one thing at a time-unlike the eye, which is capable of panoramic view. Silence and Slow Time proposes a way of thinking about music that is faithful to the experience of playing or listening during a real performance. Boykan argues against the common assumption that thematic relationships automatically insure musical coherence, because the repetition or the transformation of a theme is only meaningful if we consider when it occurs. This argument is developed through a close reading of passages from the full range of Western music. Analyses of dramatic narratives in Haydn, Beethoven, Schubert, and Chopin reveal a richness that can only be captured if thematic or voice-leading relationships are placed within a temporal context. Other kinds of narrative are explored in a Renaissance motet, and in the music of Wolf and Debussy at the end of the 19th Century. The book devotes several chapters to the great innovators of the 20th Century, and concludes with a detailed study of the Schoenberg Trio that traces its thematic and harmonic process to suggest a somewhat oblique relation to the apocalyptic moment when it was composed.
Product Details
Format
Hardback
Publication date
2004
Publisher
Scarecrow Press United States
Number of pages
240
Condition
New
Number of Pages
240
Place of Publication
Lanham, MD, United States
ISBN
9780810847514
SKU
V9780810847514
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
Ref
99-15
About Martin Boykan
Martin Boykan is the Irving G. Fine Professor of Music at Brandeis University.
Reviews for Silence and Slow Time
Martin Boykan has written a beautiful book that will appeal to all those who care passionately about music and believe that it warrants thinking about it seriously. Elegantly written, it clearly reflects the mind of a composer, though one writing almost exclusively about the music of others. The payoff is very high indeed.
Robert P. Morgan, Yale University This work reflects the mind of one of the country's most outstanding musicians whose training is all too rare nowadays, as a pianist/performer, composer, and expert in analysis. Martin Boykan has drawn on his training with some of the century's greatest musicians (including Steuermann, Hindemith, Piston and Szell) to produce profound and insightful musical analyses without the wearying analytical apparatus that is too often a crutch for others. His book speaks to the musical, as his teaching always has. Anyone who seriously listens and loves to think about listening will find it a treasure trove. Generations of composition students can attest to his brilliant teaching of composition and analysis. Now he can reach a wider audience.
Eric Chafe, Brandeis University Composer Boykan has written a collection of essays looking at analysis from a temporal viewpoint. Understanding harmonic language and motivic repetition is only part of the equation, he argues; using visual imagery or literary narrative to explain music can result in distortion, as music has its own dimension. 'Time counts for everything in music', yet 'time in music is very different from the time in which we ordinarily live our lives'. Boykan produces some intriguing insights into music, which are directly related to the experience of performance.
Piano Professional
Analyses of the tonal, melodic, or rhythmic relationships of musical structures commonly discuss these relationships in a manner that ignores the context of time. Composer Martin Boykan reconsiders works in the canon of Western music, from the Renaissance to the twentieth century, within the framework of the actual listening or performing experience. How events flow in the unfolding of the work in the musical narrative is essential to its meaning.
The Beethoven Journal
I found this book immensely interesting...As a musicologist, I enjoyed reading a book on musical theory that wasn't overly analytical or Schenkerian in its discussion or detail, but truly examined music as a creative result of a composer's artistic expression.
Music Reference Services Quarterly
Martin Boykan's keen insights into music past and present will be of great value to readers with widely different backgrounds.
Lewis Lockwood, Harvard University ...insightful and thought-provoking....an excellent introduction...
vol. 61
Notes: Quarterly Journal of the Music Library Association, JUNE 2005
Robert P. Morgan, Yale University This work reflects the mind of one of the country's most outstanding musicians whose training is all too rare nowadays, as a pianist/performer, composer, and expert in analysis. Martin Boykan has drawn on his training with some of the century's greatest musicians (including Steuermann, Hindemith, Piston and Szell) to produce profound and insightful musical analyses without the wearying analytical apparatus that is too often a crutch for others. His book speaks to the musical, as his teaching always has. Anyone who seriously listens and loves to think about listening will find it a treasure trove. Generations of composition students can attest to his brilliant teaching of composition and analysis. Now he can reach a wider audience.
Eric Chafe, Brandeis University Composer Boykan has written a collection of essays looking at analysis from a temporal viewpoint. Understanding harmonic language and motivic repetition is only part of the equation, he argues; using visual imagery or literary narrative to explain music can result in distortion, as music has its own dimension. 'Time counts for everything in music', yet 'time in music is very different from the time in which we ordinarily live our lives'. Boykan produces some intriguing insights into music, which are directly related to the experience of performance.
Piano Professional
Analyses of the tonal, melodic, or rhythmic relationships of musical structures commonly discuss these relationships in a manner that ignores the context of time. Composer Martin Boykan reconsiders works in the canon of Western music, from the Renaissance to the twentieth century, within the framework of the actual listening or performing experience. How events flow in the unfolding of the work in the musical narrative is essential to its meaning.
The Beethoven Journal
I found this book immensely interesting...As a musicologist, I enjoyed reading a book on musical theory that wasn't overly analytical or Schenkerian in its discussion or detail, but truly examined music as a creative result of a composer's artistic expression.
Music Reference Services Quarterly
Martin Boykan's keen insights into music past and present will be of great value to readers with widely different backgrounds.
Lewis Lockwood, Harvard University ...insightful and thought-provoking....an excellent introduction...
vol. 61
Notes: Quarterly Journal of the Music Library Association, JUNE 2005