A History of Emotion in Western Music
A Thousand Years from Chant to Pop
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc
Published:5th Nov '20
Should be back in stock very soon
When asked to describe what music means to them, most people talk about its power to express or elicit emotions. As a melody can produce a tear, tingle the spine, or energize athletes, music has a deep impact on how we experience and encounter the world. Because of the elusiveness of these musical emotions, however, little has been written about how music creates emotions and how musical emotion has changed its meaning for listeners across the last millennium. In this sweeping landmark study, author Michael Spitzer provides the first history of musical emotion in the Western world, from Gregorian chant to Beyoncé. Combining intellectual history, music studies, philosophy, and cognitive psychology, A History of Emotion in Western Music introduces current approaches to the study of emotion and formulates an original theory of how musical emotion works. Diverging from psychological approaches that center listeners' self-reports or artificial experiments, Spitzer argues that musical emotions can be uncovered in the techniques and materials of composers and performers. Together with its extensive chronicle of the historical evolution of musical style and emotion, this book offers a rich union of theory and history.
This book is an important foray into the place of music in the human experience. Studies of emotion have been permeating recent scholarship in other disciplines in (and beyond) the humanities, and this volume will help the field of music studies catch up. Summing Up: Essential. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty; professionals. * M. D. Jenkins, Wright State University, CHOICE *
...the historical correlations between the musical compositions he selects and the relevant period's ethos are well made, and Spitzer's skill as a music analyst should not be doubted. * Stephanie Rocke, Emotions: History, Culture, Society *
In this extraordinary volume, building on decades of research and music analysis, Michael Spitzer offers the reader not one but two books. He not only constructs a richer model for the staging and experiencing of musical emotion, but he also breaks new ground in demonstrating, from Hildegard of Bingen to the latest popular music, how music has its own history of changing emotional cultures, and the extent to which we can reconstruct what it was possible to feel or express in each era. It is thrilling to follow Spitzer's masterful arguments as he concisely dissects not only the speculative claims of philosophers throughout history, but also the theories and experimental results of psychologists of our own time, drawing out their positive contributions to forge a theory of breathtaking scope. * Robert S. Hatten, author of A Theory of Virtual Agency for Western Art Music *
ISBN: 9780190061753
Dimensions: 183mm x 257mm x 36mm
Weight: 1016g
456 pages