Avant Garde
An American Odyssey from Gertrude Stein to Pierre Boulez- Authors:
- Publisher:
- 2012
Summary
Gertrude Stein and philosopher Alfred North Whitehead were unlikely friends who spent most of their mature lives in exile: Stein in France and Whitehead in the United States. Their friendship was based on a mutual admiration for the philosophical pragmatism of William James and skepticism toward the European tradition of intellectual abstraction extending as far back as Plato and Aristotle. Though neither was musical, both were leading exponents of a new orientation toward time and knowledge acquisition that would go on to influence succeeding generations of composers. Through Virgil Thomson, Stein came to influence John Cage and the New York school of abstract music; through his teaching in the United States, Whitehead’s philosophy of time and cognition came to be seen in America and abroad as an alternative to Newtonian neoclassicism, an alternative clearly acknowledged in the metric modulations of Elliott Carter and Conlon Nancarrow as well as the post-1950 total serialism of Pierre Boulez and Karlheinz Stockhausen.
The seemingly unlikely influence of Stein and Whitehead on Thomson, Cage, Carter, and the minimalists tells a remarkable story of transmission within and among the arts and philosophy, one that Robin Maconie unravels through his series of essays in Avant Garde: An American Odyssey from Gertrude Stein to Pierre Boulez. Maconie explores, from Hollywood to Harvard, the way in which music functions as a form of communication across the boundaries of language, serving the causes of trade and diplomacy through its representation of national identity, emotional character, honorable intention, and social discipline. The study of music as a language inevitably became the object of information science after World War II, but, as Maconie notes, 60 years on, music’s refusal to yield to scientific elucidation has generated a stream of anti-music propaganda by a powerful collective of celebrity science writers. In a sequence of linked essays, Stockhausen specialist Robin Maconie reconsiders the role of music and music technology through careful examination of key modern concepts with respect to time, existence, identity, and relationship as formulated by such thinkers as Einstein, Russell, Whitehead, and Stein, along with Freud, Schoenberg, Wittgenstein, and Marcel Duchamp.
This foray into art, music, science, and philosophy is ideally suited for students and scholars of these disciplines, as well as those seeking to understand more deeply the influence these individuals had on one another’s work and modern music.
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Bibliographic data
- Copyright year
- 2012
- ISBN-Print
- 978-0-8108-8312-3
- ISBN-Online
- 978-0-8108-8313-0
- Publisher
- Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham
- Language
- English
- Pages
- 332
- Product type
- Book Titles
Table of contents
- CONTENTS No access
- Introduction No access
- 1 The search for King Kong No access Pages 1 - 26
- 2 Sacks's agnosia No access Pages 27 - 42
- 3 How not to listen No access Pages 43 - 72
- 4 Recording angel No access Pages 73 - 92
- 5 The secret life of savages No access Pages 93 - 110
- 6 About Wittgenstein No access Pages 111 - 128
- 7 La guerre du destin No access Pages 129 - 150
- 8 Boulez in the underworld No access Pages 151 - 162
- 9 The French connection No access Pages 163 - 178
- 10 The poetics of Milton No access Pages 179 - 200
- 11 An upside down unicycle No access Pages 201 - 214
- 12 Alfred North Whitehead No access Pages 215 - 244
- 13 Speaking in tongues No access Pages 245 - 262
- 14 Two studies No access Pages 263 - 280
- 15 Recent intelligence No access Pages 281 - 296
- 16 Art and Realpolitik No access Pages 297 - 310
- Bibliography No access Pages 311 - 318
- Index No access Pages 319 - 330
- About the Author No access Pages 331 - 332





