Front cover image for The fine art of repetition : essays in the philosophy of music

The fine art of repetition : essays in the philosophy of music

Peter Kivy
This collection of essays from Peter Kivy span a period of some thirty years and focus on a richly diverse set of issues providing an enjoyable and insightful introduction to the philosophy of art and music.
Print Book, English, 1993
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1993
x, 373 p. ; 24 cm
9780521434621, 9780521434621, 9780521435987, 0521434629, 0521434629, 0521435986
911309940
Preface; Introduction; PART I: I. Mattheson as philosopher of art; II. Mainwaring's Handel: its relation to English aesthetics; III. Charles Burney, music critic; IV. Kant and the Affektenlehre: what he said, and what I wish he had said; V. Mozart and monotheism: an essay in spurious aesthetics; VI. Child Mozart as an aesthetic symbol; VII. Something I've always wanted to know about Hanslick; VIII. What was Hanslick denying?; IX. Charles Darwin on music; X. Herbert Spencer and a musical dispute; PART II: XI. The fine art of repetition; XII. Platonism in music: a kind of defense; XIII. Platonism in music: another kind of defense; XIV. Orchestrating platonism; XV. Opera talk: a philosophical 'phantasie'; XVI. How did Mozart do it?: living conditions in the world of opera; XVII. How did Mozart do it?: Replies to my critics; XVIII. Live performances and dead composers: on the ethics of musical interpretation; XIX. On the concept of the 'historically authentic' performance; XX. Paul Robinson's Opera and Ideas; XXI. From ideology to music: Leonard Meyer's theory of style change; XXII. Music and liberal education; XXIII. A new music criticism?; XXIV. Is music an art?