Composing under the Skin
ISBN: 9789461661531
Platform/Publisher: Project MUSE / Leuven University Press
Digital rights: Users: Unlimited; Printing: Chapters; Download: Chapters
Subjects: Performance practice (Music); Composition (Music); Performance practice (Music); Composition (Music);

A revealing study of the physical presence of the musician in musical performance. Fingers slipping over guitar strings, the tap of a bow against the body of a cello, a pianist humming along to the music: contemporary composers often work with parasitic, non-conventional sounds such as these. Are they to be perceived as musical elements or do they shift attention to the physical effort of music-making, contact between a body and an instrument? Composer Paul Craenen explores ways in which the musician's body is revealed in musical performance. He leads us from Cage, Lachenmann, Kagel and their contemporaries to a discussion of how today's generation of young composers is writing a body paradigm into composition itself. Micro-temporal physical gestures and instrumental timbre provide the key to unveiling the physical presence of both a musician and a 'composing body'. The author's concept of 'intercorporeality', along with the idea of an alternating linear and non-linear relationship of the composing body to time, casts new light on the relationship between musicians, composers, and music consumers.

This publication is GPRC-labeled (Guaranteed Peer-Reviewed Content).

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