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How does music manifest through time and, simultaneously, how does time manifest through music?For the experimental psychologist, the experience of time during music listening or performance is something that may be studied empirically. For philosophers, fundamental questions of time continue to be the subject of ongoing debate in philosophy: is time linear? What are past, present and future? What is duration and what makes a perceptual present, or moment? For the performer, musical time can exist as a subjective vehicle of expression. Although any of the three could be chosen as a starting point, the order presented in the text's structure offers a journey from empiricism to application, via contemplation. This volume deals with the complex relationship between music and time. It presents a staunchly interdisciplinary perspective defined by the terms Psychology, Philosophy and Practice. The text is divided into sections concerning "experience", "enactment" and "meaning", as points of intersection between the three primary methodologies of the title. As such, this is a book for the scholar, the student of music, and the interested reader. For the scholar, it offers new interconnections and comparisons. For the student, its pluralistic approach presents the most comprehensive overview available to date regarding the topic. For the interested reader, the volume offers answers to questions which concern us as listeners and audiences at concerts, gigs, and festivals.
MICHELLE PHILLIPS is a music psychologist and a Senior Lecturer at the Royal Northern College of Music. MATTHEW SERGEANT is a composer and researcher and Reader in Music at Bath Spa University. MICHELLE PHILLIPS is a music psychologist and a Senior Lecturer at the Royal Northern College of Music. MATTHEW SERGEANT is a composer and researcher and Reader in Music at Bath Spa University.
IntroductionMatthew Sergeant and Michelle Phillips Part I. Experiences1. Music Listening and the Perception of Time: The LEMI ModelMichelle Phillips2. The Remembrance of Things to Be: An Approach to Memory, Repetition, and Cyclical StructuresBryn Harrison3. An Overview of the Psychology of Time PerceptionLuke A. Jones4. The Perceptual Present and the Philosophical Puzzle of Musical ExperienceAbigail Connor and Joel Smith Part II. Enactments5. Ensemble Timing in String QuartetsAlan Wing, Maria Witek, Ryan Stables, and Adrian Bradbury6. Midway Ambiguities: Disorientation and Interpretation in Long-Duration MusicPhilip Thomas7. Live Coding as a Theatre of Agency and a Factory of Time Alejandro Franco Briones Part III. Meanings8. Comparing Temporal Fictions in Tonality and Triadic Post-Tonality: Chopin's Fourth Ballade as a Link Between the AgesJason Noble9. Nothing Really Changes': Material Processes in and as Timein hearmleoþ-gieddungaLauren Redhead10. Music, Time, and SocietyMatthew Sergeant Conclusion: Multiplicity, Fluidity, FragilityMichelle Phillips and Matthew SergeantBibliographyIndex