Kivy’s Mystery: Absolute Music and What the Formalist Can (or Could) Hear
Abstract Peter Kivy has said that the power of purely instrumental music remains an unexplained wonder. With this larger question in mind, I will consider: (1) the issues in musical aesthetics that led to what Kivy termed his enhanced formalism, (2) his conception of expressive properties in music a...
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Published in | The Journal of aesthetics and art criticism Vol. 79; no. 3; pp. 366 - 376 |
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Main Author | |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
UK
Oxford University Press
12.08.2021
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Abstract
Peter Kivy has said that the power of purely instrumental music remains an unexplained wonder. With this larger question in mind, I will consider: (1) the issues in musical aesthetics that led to what Kivy termed his enhanced formalism, (2) his conception of expressive properties in music and how a distinction between having and understanding an emotion can help clarify this issues here (that is, where what we gain in human understanding from having had the emotion is not contained within the experience of that emotion itself), and, most importantly for Kivy’s larger mystery, (3) the way that counterpoint, in an often unrecognized way, can present mimetic content of a kind that can explain the sense of musical profundity that it often awakens. It may turn out that absolute music’s profundity can be explained by the resonances this kind of layered and complex music has with the living, the ordering, the making sense, of a life. |
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ISSN: | 0021-8529 1540-6245 |
DOI: | 10.1093/jaac/kpab035 |