this doesn't seem   appropriate since this list doesn't primarily concern
itself with music.   It is   also very expensive for something rather
offtopic.   Miller isn't very enthusiastic about it either.   Perhaps we can
skip
this and go on to Conger's proposed discussion of facture.
Kate Sullivan
2009.09.21
PETER KIVY
Antithetical Arts: On the Ancient Quarrel between Literature and Music
Peter Kivy, Antithetical Arts: On the Ancient Quarrel between Literature
and Music, Oxford UP, 2009, 240pp., $55.00 (hbk), ISBN 9780199562800.
Reviewed by Peter Rinderle, University of T|bingen

?
The title and subtitle of Peter Kivy's new book might be considered as
slightly misleading, as it is the meaning of pure or absolute music and its
value which are really its main concern. Kivy is not at all interested in the
respective merits of two different art forms, and he doesn't deny the
possibility of successfully combining meaningful words and beautiful noises in
songs
or operas. So there is no general antithesis between literature and music.
His central question is what to make of the strange phenomenon that
developed in the late 18th and early 19th century and which we call 'absolute
music'. How are we to understand those beautiful noises made by a symphony
orchestra, a string quartet or a piano player? And why do we value them so
highly?
It is the quarrel between two opposing traditions about how to understand
music to which the title alludes. The narrativists, as Kivy calls them, use a
literary analogy. They attribute meaning to a piece of instrumental music
as they attribute meaning to a novel or a theatre play. For them, in music as
in novels we are mainly interested in the representation and arousal of
certain emotions. The formalists, on the other hand -- and Kivy is the leading
musical formalist of our times -- are strongly opposed to this way of
"reading" absolute music. It is the formal composition in which the meaning of
music resides and it is an ecstatic or even mystical experience to which
music,
if attended to appropriately, might lead that is the true source of its
value.
As far as its own formal composition is concerned, the book might first
appear as a collection of eleven separate essays, three of which have been
published already. But Kivy, by amply providing little summaries of his claims
and transitions between the individual chapters, manages to create a
well-organized whole. The book has three parts: Part I provides an account of
the
historical origins of the quarrel between the narrativists and the formalists.
Part II is primarily concerned with a critique of the leading narrativists
in musicology and music philosophy in the present debate. In Part III, Kivy
tries to present a more positive account of the value of absolute music.
In the first part, Kivy shows that the quarrel between literature and music
has historical roots that reach back at least to the 18th century. Back
then, the question was how to understand the relation between words and music,
particularly in operas. Most people thought that music ought to be the
servant to the text and that the meaning of a piece of music is always finally
pre-established by the words to which it is put. But others, among them
Mozart, accorded music the primacy, and there was an accepted, although not
widespread, practice of putting words to previously composed music. Here we
have a
philosophical puzzle: if music is accorded the primacy or a complete
independence from words, how do we know which words will fit its meaning?
Hanslick, the radical formalist, argues that music doesn't have any
extra-musical
content in the first place. Words and music are two completely different sorts
of beasts.
Although Kivy certainly wants to accord a primacy to music, Hanslick's
position seems highly implausible to him. Even if, as a formalist, he denies
that music has any representational or semantic content, Kivy doesn't deny, as
Hanslick does, the expressive properties of music. A melody doesn't
represent any particular emotion and is not able to arouse emotions in an
aesthetically relevant way, but it might still appear as sad or joyful. These
emotive
appearances, however, do not give any content to absolute music -- they just
enrich its formal structure. Kivy speaks of an 'enhanced' version of
formalism, and it might thus be perfectly reasonable to ask whether the words
fit
a certain melody. Kivy observes that Hanslick, in the foreword to the eighth
edition of Of Musical Beauty, already had a glimpse of the truth in this
matter and missed a great opportunity. Hanslick there remarks that we speak of
the fragrance of a rose -- as a perceptual property -- taking this quality
to be a representation of fragrance.
His extension of formalism notwithstanding, Kivy still finds himself in
sharp disagreement with the narrativist. The latter assumes that the music
itself contains all the material of a story we possibly could need and that
music can be understood like a novel. So in Part II of his book Kivy turns to
the present scene and gives a detailed account of several recent attempts to
interpret Brahms' Intermezzo in B-flat Minor, Op. 117, No. 2 (by Jenefer
Robinson), Beethoven's String Quartet in F-Minor, No. 95 (by Fred Maus), the
second movement of Mahler's 9th Symphony (by Anthony Newcomb) and
Shostakovich's 10th Symphony (by Gregory Karl and Jenefer Robinson).
First of all, he distinguishes two distinct groups among those using the
literary analogy to interpret absolute music. Some authors -- they are in the
smaller group -- tend to describe absolute music in all kinds of details
including proper names. Kivy dismisses this first approach right away, without
paying sufficient attention to the fact that the difference between those
approaches might just be a gradual difference rather than a categorical or
qualitative one. Then he focuses on those authors who proceed much more
cautiously and merely speak of an indefinite persona that the attentive and
cultivated listener might discover in a piece of instrumental music. Today,
this
approach is usually called the persona theory of musical expressiveness and is
defended by philosophers such as Aaron Ridley, Jerrold Levinson and Jenefer
Robinson.
The main aim of the persona theory is to give an account of the expressive
properties of absolute music. The claim is that while listening to a piece
of music, the listener imagines an indefinite person who expresses his or her
emotions in the music. A piece of music thus might appear to be sad because
the musical persona is imagined to be sad. While imagining a hypothetical
persona to be sad the listener also responds emotionally to the music: he
either identifies with the persona and feels sad himself, or he sympathizes
with the person and feels pity for her. In this manner, the persona theorist
isn't merely able to tell us what a piece of music means; he also can give an
account of why a piece of music can be of so much interest and value to its
listener.
Most of the doubts Kivy raises about the literary analogy are, by now,
quite well known as they have been discussed extensively in the literature:
Why
should we be interested in all the repetitions we find in absolute music and
we don't find in literature? Can pure instrumental music really give a
description detailed enough to attribute a specific emotion to a musical
persona? How could absolute music tell us something about the gender of this
person
or the object of his or her emotions? Kivy thinks these details, if at all,
are to be found in the mind of the listener alone. He accuses the listener
of using his private and completely idiosyncratic associations and then of
projecting certain characteristics on the music. Obviously all this, Kivy
argues, has nothing to do whatsoever with really understanding and
appreciating
a piece of absolute music.
To a certain extent, I understand Kivy's worries very well. He is surely
right to point to the danger of using music merely as a screen for projecting
one's personal fantasies. But someone interested in the music for its own
sake might very well be able to distinguish between this kind of, as one might
say, perverted use of music and a way of properly paying attention to the
meaning of a piece of music that also respects its aesthetic autonomy.
Besides, the advantage of the persona theory is just simply that it has found
an
explanation of the expressive properties of music and its particular interest
to its listener.
Kivy, however, has a new objection to offer with which he tries to show the
absurdity of a narrativist position. If, and this is the first premise of
his argument, the narrativists had got it right, there wouldn't be any
absolute music at all. The class of pure music -- which is precisely defined
as
having no extra-musical content -- would be empty. But, here we have the
second premise, certainly nobody would want to deny the existence of pure
music.
Therefore, Kivy concludes, the narrativist must be wrong. He readily
concedes that there is some instrumental music we only have thought to be
absolute
music. But in the process of understanding it, it might turn out, that this
piece actually has an extra-musical content and therefore is a piece of
program music. But that cannot be true for all pieces of instrumental music.
There wouldn't be any absolute music left.
I do not think this argument is convincing because the definition of
absolute music and its distinction from program music is not as clear-cut as
Kivy
thinks. True enough, we want to distinguish absolute music, which does not
refer to an independently given story or person, from program music, which
aims directly at the description of a particular story or a particular person
that exists independently and outside of music. This in itself, however, is
no reason to deny the possibility that absolute music reveals to us
particular emotions of an imaginary human being who, precisely, does not exist
outside of the piece in question. Willing to admit some extra-musical content,
a
narrativist still would not want to speak of program music in such a case.
Kivy isn't blind; he sees the danger he runs into and he surely tries to get
around the obvious objection that the dispute between the two traditions
cannot be settled by a definitional stipulation. Nevertheless in the end,
instead of avoiding this danger, he falls prey to it.
What does Kivy have to offer in order to answer the question of our
particular interest in absolute music? Remember, absolute music doesn't have a
text, so it doesn't have a literary meaning. Although it therefore can't teach
us any moral lessons, Kivy concedes that it might turn us, for the moment of
listening at least, into a better person and improve our character. So music
might be attributed a moral force, however limited, after all. It seems to
me, however, that Kivy doesn't see that this move cannot be considered as a

Reply via email to