Everything about Definition Of Music totally explained
The definition of music is a contested evaluation of what constitutes
music and varies through history, geography, and within societies.
Definitions vary as music, like
art, is a subjectively perceived phenomenon. Its definition has been tackled by
philosophers,
lexicographers,
composers,
teachers,
semioticians or semiologists,
linguists,
scientists, and
musicians.
Music may be defined according to various criteria including organization, pleasantness, intent, social construction, perceptual processes and engagement, universal aspects or family resemblances, and through contrast or negative definition.
The term "music"
Etymology
The word
music comes from the
Greek mousikê (tekhnê) by way of the Latin
musica. It is ultimately derived from
mousa, the Greek word for
muse. In ancient Greece, the word
mousike was used to mean any of the arts or sciences governed by the Muses. Later, in Rome,
ars musica embraced
poetry as well as instrument-oriented music. In the European
Middle Ages, musica was part of the mathematical
quadrivium -
arithmetics,
geometry,
astronomy and musica. The concept of musica was split into three major kinds by the fifth century philosopher, Boethius:
musica universalis,
musica humana, and
musica instrumentalis. Of those, only the last - musica instrumentalis - referred to music as performed sound.
Musica universalis]or[musicamundana] referred to the order of the
universe, as
God had created it in "measure, number and weight". The proportions of the
spheres of the planets and stars (which at the time were still thought to revolve around the earth) were perceived as a form of music, without necessarily implying that any
sound would be heard - music refers strictly to the mathematical proportions. From this concept later resulted the romantic idea of a music of the spheres.
Musica humana,designated the proportions of the
human body. These were thought to reflect the proportions of the Heavens and as such, to be an expression of God's greatness. To Medieval thinking, all things were connected with each other - a mode of thought that finds its traces today in the occult sciences or esoteric thought - ranging from
astrology to believing certain
minerals have certain beneficiary effects.
Musica instrumentalis, finally, was the lowliest of the three disciplines and referred to the manifestation of those same mathematical proportions in sound - be it sung or played on instruments. The polyphonic organization of different melodies to sound at the same time was still a relatively new invention then, and it's understandable that the mathematical or physical relationships in
frequency that give rise to the
musical intervals as we hear them, should be foremost among the preoccupations of Medieval musicians.
Translations
The languages of many cultures don't include a word for or that would be translated as
music.
Inuit and most
North American Indian languages don't have a general term for music. Among the
Aztecs, the ancient
Mexican theory of rhetorics, poetry, dance, and instrumental music, used the
Nahuatl term
In xochitl-in kwikatl to refer a complex mix of music and other poetic verbal and non-verbal elements, and reserve the word
Kwikakayotl (or cuicacayotl) only for the sung expressions (Leon-Portilla 2007, 11).
In
Africa there's no term for music in
Tiv,
Yoruba,
Igbo,
Efik,
Birom,
Hausa,
Idoma,
Eggon or
Jarawa. Many other languages have terms which only partly cover what Europeans mean by the term
music (Schafer). The
Mapuche of
Argentina don't have a word for
music, but they do have words for instrumental versus improvised forms (
kantun), European and non-Mapuche music (
kantun winka), ceremonial songs (
öl), and
tayil (Robertson 1976, 39).
In
Czech,
hudba is instrumental music and only by implication
vocal music. Some languages in West Africa have no term for music but the speakers do have the concept (Nettl 1989,).
Musiqi is the
Persian word for the science and art of music,
muzik being the sound and performance of music (Sakata 1983, ), though some things European influenced listeners would include, such as
Quran chanting, are excluded. Actually, there are varying degrees of "musicness"; Quran chanting and
Adhan isn't considered music, but classical improvised song, classical instrumental metric composition, and popular dance music are. However, from a European influenced musicological analysis, or from the standpoint of an untrained European influenced listener, Quran chanting is structurally similar to classical singing (Nettl 1989, ).
Definitions
As organized sound
An often-cited definition of music, coined by
Edgard Varèse, is that it's "organized sound" (Goldman 1961, 133). The fifteenth edition of the
Encyclopaedia Britannica describes that "while there are no sounds that can be described as inherently unmusical, musicians in each culture have tended to restrict the range of sounds that'll admit." Michael Linton, took the definition a step further to add that the form in which music is organized is an important element of the music itself. His definition of music is "the organization of sound and silence into forms that carry culturally derived meanings, cultivated for
aesthetic or utilitarian purposes".
"Organization" also seems necessary because it implies purposeful and thus
human organization. This human organizing element seems crucial to the common understanding of music. Sounds produced by non-human agents, such as waterfalls or birds, are often described as "musical", but rarely as "music". See
zoomusicology.
This definition determines music according to the poetic and the neutral levels (it must be composed sonorities), or more aesthetically, 'the
artful or pleasing organization of sound and
silence', which determines music according to the esthesic. This definition is widely held to from the late
19th century forward, which began to
scientifically analyze the relationship between sound and
perception.
Additionally, Schaeffer (1968, 284) describes that the sound of classical music "has decays; it's granular; it has attacks; it fluctuates, swollen with impurities—and all this creates a musicality that comes before any 'cultural' musicality." Yet the definition according to the esthesic level doesn't allow that the sounds of classical music are complex, are noises, rather they're regular, periodic, even, musical sounds. Nattiez (1990, 47-48): "My own position can be summarized in the following terms:
just as music is whatever people choose to recognize as such, noise is whatever is recognized as disturbing, unpleasant, or both." (see "music as social construct" below)'
As language
Many definitions of music implicitly hold that music is a communicative activity which conveys to the listener moods, emotions, thoughts, impressions, or philosophical, sexual, or political concepts or positions. "Musical language" may be used to mean style or genre, while music may be treated as language without being called such, as in
Fred Lerdahl or others' analysis of musical
grammar.
Levi R. Bryant defines music not as a language, but as a marked-based, problem-solving method such as mathematics (Ashby 2004, 4).
Because of its ability to communicate, music is sometimes described as the "universal language". Yet the "meaning" of music is obviously culturally mediated. For example, in Western society, minor chords are often perceived as "sad", an understanding other cultures rarely share.
There is significant complexity in the structural elements of music which warrant the perception of music as a language. For example, genres of music can be characterized by the manner in which sound and silence are articulated, organized, and disseminated. The composition of these elements gives rise to a system which is on par with the complexities and subtleties of 'language'.
»
As subjective experience
»
Another commonly held definition of music holds that music must be 'pleasant' (determined by the esthesic level) or '
melodic' (determined by the neutral and/or esthesic levels). This view is often used to argue that some kinds of organized sound 'are not music', while others are, based on type of organization or its aesthetic effect. Since the range of what is accepted as music varies from culture to culture and from time to time, more elaborate versions of this definition admit some kind of cultural or social evolution of music, granting that definitions may vary but universals hold. This definition was the predominant one in the
18th century, where, for example,
Mozart stated that "music must never forget itself, it must never cease to be music." One example of shifts in the music/noise dichotomy, what organization is considered musical, is the
emancipation of the dissonance, while Luciano Berio (1976) describes how the
Tristan chord was noise in 1859 since it was a sonority unexplainable by contemporary harmonic conventions.
This view of music is most heavily criticized by proponents of the view that music is a social construction (directly below), defined in opposition to "unpleasant" "noise", though this view may be subsumed in the one below in that a listener's idea of pleasant sounds may be considered socially constructed.
A subjective definition of music need not, however, be limited to traditional ideas of music as pleasant or melodious. Luciano Berio defined music as, "everything one listens to with the intention of listening to music." This approach to the definition focuses not on the
construction but on the
experience of music. Thus, music could include "found" sound structures—produced by natural phenomena or algorithms—as long as they're interpreted by means of the aesthetic cognitive processes involved in music appreciation. This approach permits the boundary between music and noise to change over time as the conventions of musical interpretation evolve within a culture, to be different in different cultures at any given moment, and to vary from person to person according to their experience and proclivities. It is further consistent with the subjective reality that even what would commonly be considered music is experienced as nonmusic if the mind is concentrating on other matters and thus not perceiving the sound's
essence as music (Clifton 1983, 9).
» See also: extreme music.
As social construct
»
Post-modern and other theories argue that, like all art, music is defined primarily by
social context. According to this view, music is what people call music, whether it's a period of
silence,
found sounds, or
performance. Cage, Kagel, Schnebel, and others, according to Nattiez (1987, 43), "perceive [certainof their pieces] (even if they don't say so publicly) as a way of "speaking" in music about music, in the second degree, as it were, to expose or denounce the institutional aspect of music's functioning."
Cultural background is a factor in determining music from noise or unpleasant experiences. The experience of only being exposed to a particular type of music influences perception of any music. Cultures of European descent are largely influenced by music making use of the
Diatonic scale. Most modern music still uses this scale and due to constant exposure, the music of other cultures isn't held with the same regard. What would be accepted as music in
Indonesia may be dismissed by many westerners as just "a din."
It might be added that as well as cultural background, historical era is also a determining factor in what is regarded as music. What would today be accepted as music in the west without the blinking of an eye, would have been ridiculed in the
17th century. And what would be music to
The Sex Pistols'
Sid Vicious, who is said to have commented, "you just pick a chord, go twang, and you've got music," would almost certainly not have been music to
William Congreve, who wrote that, "Musick has Charms to sooth a savage Beast" (
The Mourning Bride, 1697). All of which is to say that there can be no absolute definition of music that will be accepted by everybody.
Many people do, however, share a general idea of music. The Websters definition of music is a typical example: "the science or art of ordering tones or sounds in succession, in combination, and in temporal relationships to produce a composition having unity and continuity" (
Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, online edition). There are a number of potential objections to such a definition.
While some may find this definition too restrictive, arguing that "unity" and "continuity" are unnecessary, it's likely that more will find it too broad, thinking of music as being made of pitched sounds, and containing
melody,
harmony and
rhythm. The idea that music must contain these elements is widespread, but there are several examples of what would be widely regarded as music, which lack one or more of them.
Plainsong for instance, or monophonic music in general, has no harmony. Much
percussion music lacks both harmony and melody; it's true that
drums are tuned, but their pitches are indefinite, and they can't be said to produce a melody in the traditional sense. If one takes rhythm to mean a regular pulse underpinning music, then many kinds of modern
electronic music can be said to lack rhythm.
Some attempts to define music concentrate on the method of producing it. Even though some of the first "instruments" in prehistory must have been rocks and bits of wood, it's only in the past one hundred years or so that the idea that music could only be produced by a singer or a traditional musical instrument (such as a
violin in Europe, a
sitar in India or a
koto in Japan) has been challenged.
Erik Satie challenged what constituted a musical instrument, and therefore a musical sound, when he wrote the ballet
Parade which included a part for a typewriter. His justification was that since the typewriter made a noise, it was a musical instrument. In a lighter vein,
Leroy Anderson also wrote music that included a manual typewriter, played with strict rhythm.
The composer
John Cage challenged traditional ideas about music in his
4' 33", which is notated as three movements, each marked
Tacet (that is, "do not play"). The implication, as expanded upon by Cage himself, is that the background noises which are normally a distraction from the music (the humming of the lights, the shuffling of the audience, the sound of traffic outside) are to be regarded as the actual music in this case.
This is contrary to the usual view that music is, if nothing else, deliberate. Furthermore, Cage doesn't state the length of the piece - the duration of the first performance (given by
David Tudor seated at a
piano) was arrived at by consulting the
I Ching, but it isn't stated in the score (although whenever the piece is performed nowadays, the original duration is usually maintained). Some people deal with the challenges posed by
4' 33" by simply refusing to consider it as music.
Of course, even in conventional music, the "silent" gaps between notes are part of the music. The pianist
Artur Schnabel, when asked what made him a great pianist, said "The notes I handle no better than many pianists. But the pauses between the notes? Ah, that's where the art resides!" In
Joseph Haydn's
Symphony No. 45,
Farewell, the entire composition anticipates the silence at the end as the musicians one by one stop playing and walk from the stage.
The American composer
La Monte Young took this line of thought to an extreme by suggesting that even
sound itself wasn't necessary for a piece of music to exist. In
Composition 1960 #5, one of a series of similar pieces, he instructed the performer to "Turn a
butterfly (or any number of butterflies) loose in the performance area," the piece being considered complete when the butterflies have flown away. The choice of a butterfly is significant in that it's perceived as a silent animal. During the performance, there will be background noises, just as there are in a performance of
4' 33", but this isn't the thrust of the piece. Rather, Young is interested in the theatrical element of music.
Young's point in this instance is that when one goes to a performance of a piece of music, seeing the musicians perform is as much a part of the music as hearing them, so why not remove the hearing element altogether? In this sense, his interest is similar to that of
Mauricio Kagel, who carefully notates the theatrical element of performance in his works (although he usually maintains a significant sonic element also).
As a category of perception
»
Less commonly held is the cognitive definition of music, which argues that music isn't merely the sound, or the perception of sound, but a means by which perception, action and memory are organized. This definition is influential in the
cognitive sciences, which search to locate the regions of the
brain responsible for parsing or remembering different aspects of musical experience. This definition would include
dance. The
Boulangers established a school of thought centered around this concept which included the idea of
eurhythmics, which is gesture guided by music.
As musical universals
»
Often a definition of music lists the aspects or elements that make up music under that definition (see
Definition of music#As musical universals). However, in addition to a lack of consensus,
Jean Molino (1975, 43) also points out that "any element belonging to the total musical fact can be isolated, or taken as a strategic variable of musical production." Nattiez gives as examples
Mauricio Kagel's
Con Voce [withvoice], where a masked trio silently mimes playing instruments. In this example sound, a common element, is excluded, while gesture, a less common element, is given primacy. In classical music of the
common practice period, for instance, melody and harmony are often considered to be given more importance at the expense of rhythm and timbre.
John Cage considers duration the primary aspect of music as, being the temporal aspect of music, it's the only aspect common to both "sound" and "silence".
The
categorization of what is and isn't music through definition or universal aspects dates back to Aristotle. Anything up for consideration as music is compared to the category definition of music through analysis of and comparison of their properties.
Ludwig Wittgenstein however questioned this hypothesis for category formation by noting that for any universal aspect proposed for the category "game" an example which doesn't share that aspect may be found. He proposed that categorization is by family resemblance and not definition. Turned, by Wittgenstein, from philosophy to cognitive psychiatry
Eleanor Rosch proposes that categories are not clean cut but that something may be more or less a member of a category. As such the search for musical universals would fail and wouldn't provide one with a valid definition (Levitin 2006, 136–39).
Specific definitions
Clifton's phenomenological definition
In his 1983 book,
Music as Heard, which sets out from the
phenomenological position of
Husserl,
Merleau-Ponty, and
Ricœur, Thomas Clifton defines music as "an ordered arrangement of sounds and silences whose meaning is
presentative rather than
denotative. . . . This definition distinguishes music, as an end in itself, from compositional technique, and from sounds as purely physical objects." More precisely, "music is the actualization of the possibility of any sound whatever to present to some human being a meaning which he experiences with his body—that is to say, with his mind, his feelings, his senses, his will, and his metabolism" (Clifton 1983, 1). It is therefore "a certain reciprocal relation established between a person, his behavior, and a sounding object" (Clifton 1983, 10).
Clifton accordingly differentiates music from nonmusic on the basis of the human behavior involved, rather than on either the nature of compositional technique or of sounds as purely physical objects. Consequently, the distinction becomes a question of what is meant by musical behavior: "a musically behaving person is one whose very being is absorbed in the significance of the sounds being experienced." However, "It isn't altogether accurate to say that this person is listening
to the sounds. First, the person is doing more than listening: he's perceiving, interpreting, judging, and feeling. Second, the preposition 'to' puts too much stress on the sounds as such. Thus, the musically behaving person experiences musical significance by means of, or through, the sounds” (Clifton 1983, 2).
In this framework, Clifton finds that there are two things that separate music from nonmusic: (1) musical meaning is presentative, and (2) music and nonmusic are distinguished in the idea of personal involvement. "It is the notion of personal involvement which lends significance to the word
ordered in this definition of music” (Clifton 1983, 3–4).
This isn't to be understood, however, as a sanctification of extreme
relativism, since "it is precisely the ‘subjective’ aspect of experience which lured many writers earlier in this century down the path of sheer opinion-mongering. Later on this trend was reversed by a renewed interest in ‘objective,’ scientific, or otherwise nonintrospective musical analysis. But we've good reason to believe that a musical experience isn't a purely private thing, like
seeing pink elephants, and that reporting about such an experience need not be
subjective in the sense of it being a mere matter of opinion” (Clifton 1983, 8–9).
Clifton's task, then, is to describe musical experience and the objects of this experience which, together, are called "phenomena," and the activity of describing phenomena is called "phenomenology". (Clifton 1983, 9).
It is important to stress that this definition of music says nothing about aesthetic standards. "Music isn't a fact or a thing in the world, but a meaning constituted by human beings. . . . To talk about such experience in a meaningful way demands several things":
- “we have to be willing to let the composition speak to us, to let it reveal its own order and significance”
- “we have to be willing to question our assumptions about the nature and role of musical materials.”
- “we have to be ready to admit that describing a meaningful experience is itself meaningful.”
(Clifton 1983, 5–6)
Nattiez's tripartite definition
"Music, often an
art/
entertainment, is a
total social fact whose definitions vary according to
era and
culture," according to
Jean Molino (1975, 37). It is often contrasted with
noise. According to musicologist
Jean-Jacques Nattiez: "The border between music and noise is always culturally defined—which implies that, even within a single society, this border doesn't always pass through the same place; in short, there's rarely a consensus.... By all accounts there's no
single and
intercultural universal concept defining what music might be" (Nattiez 1990, 47-8 and 55).
Given the above demonstration that "there is no limit to the number or the genre of variables that might intervene in a definition of the musical," (Molino, 1987, 42) an organization of definitions and elements is necessary.
Nattiez (1990, 17; see
sign (semiotics)) describes definitions according to a
tripartite semiological scheme similar to the following:
| Poietic Process |
Esthesic Process |
| Composer (Producer) |
→ |
Sound (Trace) |
← |
Listener (Receiver) |
There are three levels of description, the poietic, the neutral, and the esthesic:
" By 'poietic' I understand describing the link among the composer's intentions, his creative procedures, his mental schemas, and the result of this collection of strategies; that is, the components that go into the work's material embodiment. Poietic description thus also deals with a quite special form of hearing (Varese called it 'the interior ear'): what the composer hears while imagining the work's sonorous results, or while experimenting at the piano, or with tape."
"By 'esthesic' I understand not merely the artificially attentive hearing of a musicologist, but the description of perceptive behaviors within a given population of listeners; that's how this or that aspect of sonorous reality is captured by their perceptive strategies." (Nattiez 1990:90)
The neutral level is that of the physical "trace", (Saussere's sound-image, a sonority, a score), created and interpreted by the esthesic level (which corresponds to a perceptive definition; the perceptive and/or "social" construction definitions below) and the poietic level (which corresponds to a creative, as in compositional, definition; the organizational and social construction definitions below).
Table describing types of definitions of music:
|
poietic level (choice of the composer) |
neutral level (physical definition) |
esthesic level (perceptive judgment) |
| music |
musical sound |
sound of the harmonic spectrum |
agreeable sound |
| nonmusic |
noise (nonmusical) |
noise (complex sound) |
disagreeable noise |
(Nattiez 1990, p.46)
Because of this range of definitions, the study of music comes in a wide variety of forms. There is the study of sound and vibration or acoustics, the cognitive study of music, the study of music theory and performance practice or music theory and ethnomusicology and the study of the reception and history of music, generally called musicology.
Xenakis's definition
Composer Iannis Xenakis in "Towards a Metamusic" (chapter 7 of Xenakis 1971) defined music in the following way:
It is a sort of comportment necessary for whoever thinks it and makes it.
It is an individual plemora, a realization.
It is a fixing in sound of imagined virtualities (cosmological, philosophical, . . ., arguments)
It is normative, that is, unconsciously it's a model for being or for doing by sympathetic drive.
It is catalytic: its mere presence permits internal psychic or mental transformations in the same way as the crystal ball of the hypnotist.
It is the gratuitous play of a child.
It is a mystical (but atheistic) asceticism. Consequently expressions of sadness, joy, love and dramatic situations are only very limited particular instances.
(Xenakis 1971, 181)
Sources
Ashby, Arved, ed. 2004. The Pleasure of Modernist Music: Listening, Meaning, Intention, Ideology. Eastman Studies in Music 29. Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press. ISBN 1-58046-143-3.
Clifton, Thomas. 1983. Music as Heard: A Study in Applied Phenomenology. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-02091-0
Goldman, Richard Franko. 1961. “Varèse: Ionisation; Density 21.5; Intégrales; Octandre; Hyperprism; Poème Electronique. Instrumentalists, cond. Robert Craft. Columbia MS 6146 (stereeo)” (in Reviews of Records). Musical Quarterly 47, no. 1. (January):133–34.
Leon-Portilla, Miguel. 2007. "La música de los aztecas / Music Among Aztecs", Pauta, no. 103:7–19.
Levitin, Daniel J. (2006). This Is Your Brain on Music: The Science of a Human Obsession. New York: Dutton. ISBN 0525949690.
Molino, Jean (1975). "Fait musical et sémiologue de la musique", Musique en Jeu, no. 17:37-62.
Nattiez, Jean-Jacques. 1990. Music and Discourse: Toward a Semiology of Music . Translated by Carolyn Abbate. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-09136-6.
Nettl, Bruno (1989). Blackfoot Musical Thought: Comparative Perspectives. Ohio: The Kent State University Press. ISBN 0-87338-370-2
Robertson-De Carbo, C. E. 1976. "Tayil as Category and Communication among the Argentine Mapuche: A Methodological Suggestion", 1976 Yearbook of the International Folk Music Council, 8, p.35-42.
Sakata, Lorraine. 1983. Music in the Mind, The Concepts of Music and Musicians in Afghanistan. Kent: Kent State University Press.
Schafer, R. Murray. 1996. "Music and the Soundscape," in Classic Essays on Twentieth-Century Music: A Continuing Symposium, edited by Richard Kostelanetz and Joseph Darby, with Matthew Santa. New York: Schirmer Books; London: Prentice Hall International. ISBN 0-02-864581-2 (pbk)
Xenakis, Iannis. 1971. Formalized Music: Thought and Mathematics in Composition. Bloomington and London: Indiana University Press.Further Information
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