Foreword
In what regard does music function as an agent of
meaning?
Chapter
1
1. What
are some defining characteristics of musical authenticity in rock? In its
construct, who is privileged and who is disparaged? What cultural work do such distinctions do?
2. What
are our some of our transparent assumptions about music?
3. How
do they reflect the structure of a classic industrial economy?
Chapter
2
1. What
role does music play in the early nineteenth century’s construction of
bourgeois subjectivity?
2. How
does Beethoven differ from his predecessors?
3. What
is the Beethoven cult?
4. Which
two aspects of the Beethoven cult does Cook discuss? What is their significance
beyond Beethoven?
5. What
components of music’s mystical qualities does the Beethoven cult celebrate? How?
6. How
does such spiritualization affect the historic relationship between words and
music?
7. What
irony ensued?
Chapter
3
1. How
have 21st-century realities inverted the basic assumptions of 19th-century
musical culture?
2. By
what process did modern music become “modern music”?
3. In
Cook’s view, what are some signs of vitality in classical music? Which aspects are “beyond resuscitation”?
Chapter
4
1. What
is the abiding paradox of musical notation?
2. Discuss
the following statement: “[N]otations…transmit a whole way of thinking about
music.”
3. Why
were 19th-century writers inclined to believe specious incidents
attributed to Mozart and Beethoven?
4. What
is the underlying root metaphor of Western musical culture?
5. What
does Cook see as the “basic paradox” of music?
6. How
does Cook apply Dawkins’s “river of genes” image to music?
Chapter
5
1. How
do our perceptions of “Nikosi Sikelel iAfrica” differ from our perceptions of
the “Hammerklavier”?
2. What
hierarchy ensues from the traditional understanding of classical music?
3. How
does a reception-based approach alter our perception of music?
Chapter
6
1. Why
is the concept of a definitive edition problematic?
2. Why
can there be no certifiably “authentic” performance?
3. Conversely,
how do “authentic” performances mirror our own time?
4. How
did musicologists and theorists come to realize the necessity for engagement
that had previously been the exclusive province of ethnomusicologists?
Chapter
7
1. What
is a transparent system of beliefs? Examples?
2. What
applications does critical theory find in music?
3. What
is Cook’s antidote to Tomlinson’s extreme pessimism?
Conclusion
1. Comment
on the following quote from Philip Brett:
“[Music is] an enclave in our society—a sisterhood or brotherhood of
lovers, music lovers, united by an unmediated form of communication that is
only by imperfect analogy called a language, ‘the’ language of feeling.”
2. In
what regards does music have “unique powers as an agent of ideology”?
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