Music as Philosophy: Adorno and Beethoven's Late Style

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Indiana University Press, 14 jun 2006 - 369 páginas

Beethoven's late style is the language of his ninth symphony, the Missa Solemnis, the last piano sonatas and string quartets, the Diabelli Variations, the Bagatelles, as well as five piano sonatas, five string quartets, and several smaller piano works. Historically, these works are seen as forging a bridge between the Classical and Romantic traditions: in terms of their musical structure, they continue to be regarded as revolutionary.

Spitzer's book examines these late works in light of the musical and philosophical writings of the German intellectual Theodor Adorno, and in so doing, attempts to reconcile the conflicting approaches of musical semiotics and critical theory. He draws from various approaches to musical, linguistic, and aesthetic meaning, relating Adorno to such writers as Derrida, Benjamin, and Habermas, as well as contemporary music theorists. Through analyses of Beethoven's use of specific musical techniques (including neo-Baroque fugues and counterpoint), Spitzer suggests that the composer's last works offer a philosophical and musical critique of the Enlightenment, and in doing so created the musical language of premodernism.

 

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Índice

1 Away with All Rules?
1
2 Styles
16
3 Adornos Beethoven
44
4 Late Landscapes
71
5 Invisible Cities
113
6 Ways of World Making
148
7 Kunstvereinigung
198
8 Caesura of the Classical Style
226
9 The Persistence of Critical Theory
262
Conclusion
281
Appendix
285
Notes
337
Bibliography
347
Index of Names and Concepts
359
Index of Works
367
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Sobre el autor (2006)

Michael Spitzer is Reader in Music at Durham University, United Kingdom. He has written widely on aspects of music theory and semiotics and is author of Metaphor and Musical Thought.

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