Musical Discourse of Servitude

£52.99

Musical Discourse of Servitude

Authority, Autonomy, and the Work-Concept in Fux, Bach and Handel

Theory of music and musicology Art music, orchestral and formal music Art music, orchestral and formal music Composers and songwriters

Author: Harry White

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Language: English

Published by: Oxford University Press

Published on: 14th September 2020

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 7 Mb

ISBN: 9780190903893


Examining, for the first time, the compositions of Johann Joseph Fux in relation to his contemporaries Bach and Handel

The Musical Discourse of Servitude presents a new theory of the late baroque musical imagination. Author Harry White contrasts musical "servility" and "freedom" in his analysis, with Fux tied to the prevailing servitude of the day's musical imagination, particularly the hegemonic flowering of North Italian partimento method across Europe.

In contrast, both Bach and Handel represented an autonomy of musical discourse, with Bach exhausting generic models in the mass and Handel inventing a new genre in the oratorio. A potent critique of Lydia Goehr's seminal The Imaginary Museum of Musical Works, The Musical Discourse of Servitude draws on Goehr's formulation of the "work-concept" as an imaginary construct which, according to Goehr, is an invention of nineteenth-century reception history.

White locates this concept as a defining agent of autonomy in Bach's late works, and contextualizes the "work-concept" itself by exploring rival concepts of political, religious, and musical authority which define the European musical imagination in the first half of the eighteenth century. A major revisionist statement about the musical imagination in Western art music, The Musical Discourse of Servitude will be of interest to scholars of the Baroque, particularly of Bach and Handel.

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