|
|
|
Home Office Furniture - How To Set Up A Professional Home Office
Each day, more and more people are getting caught in the 'work from home' fever. Government as well as companies is quickly embracing this type of 'work from home' scheme as there are many benefits such as employee being able to spend more time with...
Some tips to reduce debt problems
Some tips to reduce debt problems - Don't let your debt problems overpower you. Be analytical, creative and realistic to find options that can help you out. - What worked out for somebody else in resolving his economical problems may not be the...
Studying Your Study Environment
How familiar is this scene, “Sweetie, have you done your homework? Yeeeees Mom, I am finishing it right now!” You peek around the corner only to find the TV on, dim lighting,, and your student plopped on the couch, eyes glazed over, half asleep,...
University of International Relations in Beijing
As China is exerting an increasing impact upon the world, more and more people from all over the world are attracted to learn its language and experience the culture. As the political and cultural center of China, Beijing has welcomed thousands of...
Visiting Barcelona Spain
As any European can brag about, Barcelona in Spain is no exception with its endless history, much of it still remaining, but much more of it has been added on in the 20th century. In many people´s opinion, you fully appreciate what...
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
i
Zone |
Kids World |
Html Color Code |
Lyrics |
Science |
Screensavers |
Space Photos
Funny Photos |
BBC News |
Funny sms |
Wallpapers |
Free Games |
Nursery Rhymes |
Jokes
Calculate Love |
Send Free SMS |
Submit Photo |
Gallery
|
Drawings |
Art of Living |
Movie
Download free drivers
| Free Stuff
|
dictionary |
Free Fonts |
Scientists
|
Submissions
How-what-who |
Aqua |
Acne |
|
Music as it is Defined
There have been many varied definitions of music, dependent on the writer's idea of, or appreciation for, music. One man's music is another man's noise. And he defines accordingly.
One says Nevin is music and Bach is noise. One declares Mozart to be noise and Stravinsky, music. Another reverses the definition. Even the dictionary tells us that "music is the art of combining tones to please the ear."
Whose ear -- yours or mine?
A French writer, Jules Combarieu, is more general, and declares it to be "the art of thought in tone." In other words, it is an art, not a natural phenomenon; it deals with tones, and it presupposes thought; that is, educated mental action and discrimination. "Thought, using tone as its medium, creating an art work."
And still, this leaves open to discussion, "What is an art work?" We journey back to the starting point, you saying Mozart created art works, and Schonberg didn't; while I may pin my faith to Cadman and Herbert.
One might reduce the definition a little, and make it more generally satisfactory, by saying music is "thought expressed in tone." This would exclude noises -- casual, unbrained combinations of tones -- and require definite mental application, presupposing a knowledge of the essentials of musical construction.
While this definition may be satisfactory to you and to me, there are those whose idea of music is so different from ours, that only a definition to fit their own particular style would suit them.
One says music should be impersonal, abstract. Another school declares
that it should always tell a story. Still another division of the musical public says that music should go much farther than the dictionary definition above quoted; that it not only is the art of "combining tones to please the ear," but that music should represent the whole of life, whether it pleases the ear or not.
In other words, if the subject portrayed is one of pain, horror or calamity, then the music must be of clash, cacophony, discord, entirely abjuring the idea of beauty or "pleasing the ear." Out of all this, long ago, arose the question whether it was the function of music merely to be beautiful, or whether, like painting, its mission is to portray all of life -- good and bad, pleasure and sorrow, happiness and horror.
That is a question no part of the world can settle for the rest. Ever since music reached an advanced stage of development, it has been a bone of contention among musicologists and composers, and, no doubt, it will so continue for decades, and possibly for centuries.
So, not to enter discussion of it, the simpler way is to accept such a generalized definition as that suggested above, and classify music as "thought expressed through tone," to which hardly any school of music, or composition, can take exception.
About the Author
This article, written by W. Francis Gates, was taken from the February 1922 issue of magazine "Etude Musical Magazine." This article is featured at http://www.thepianopages.com, along with free piano lessons, sheet music, products, and lots more.
|
|
|
|
|
|