Music is designed to express itself completely in sound.
At its greatest, it creates a particularly concentrated, gripping and all-enveloping experience. It is able, with its
transient presence, to create a sense of loss, longing or
renewal, and to involve us emotionally in its destiny.
Sound Reasoning is designed to help you
listen. This course encourages you to be self-reliant--to get up close
to the music, without mediation or interference. Too
often, listeners may feel that they need pre-concert lectures, program notes and other verbal explanations to fully appreciate a musical work. These certainly may enhance
and supplement one's enjoyment. But, ideally, a musical
performance is a direct conversation between performers and
listeners. No matter what
your knowledge or training, you should be able to enjoy music with
the fullness of your thoughts, should be able to explore and
interpret it with confidence. The fundamental premise of this
course is that, if you listen attentively and think
constructively about what you are hearing, your awareness will
prosper and your direct connection to the music will thrive.
The course assumes little or no prior musical background. The
ability to read music is not required. A minimum of musical
terminology will be invoked. When it is necessary, all terms
are defined in a glossary easily accessible by hyper-link.
Most importantly, musical examples
are interpolated directly into the text, making it easy to evaluate all the concepts that are introduced.
Music's sounds lack literal or fixed meanings: as such, the
experience of a musical work is a very subjective one. This
course will not teach what to think. It will show how to think,
to arrive at your own balanced and carefully considered
opinions. A subjective perspective is strongest when it is built
upon objectively verifiable observations. You will learn to
develop a concrete understanding of the music's progress.
The poetry and conviction of your interpretation will grow out
of this concentrated hearing. You will also have the confidence
to test others' views against your own perceptions.
Our musical awareness now stretches further back historically and
wider geographically than ever before. It is important to be prepared for music both familiar and unfamiliar. Conventional musical training usually begins with a strong grounding in the elements,
conventions and terminology of the classical repertoire. The
risk of that approach is that it often leaves listeners at a
loss in the face of music where these terms and conventions no
longer apply.
Sound Reasoning addresses this problem by focusing on
style-transcendent principles. The concepts explored in this
course apply to any piece of music, no matter when it was written. Composers of different
historical periods and traditions have dealt with these
concepts in different ways. But the concepts
themselves are timeless: They are the issues with which
any piece of music is engaged.
Each concept is illustrated with examples both from the
classical and modern repertoires of the Western tradition.
These repertoires are often segregated from one another. Presenting them side-by-side will help illustrate the
continuity of musical thought. It will demonstrate how
music of any time and any place may explore music's basic
resources of resonance, motion and design. It will also help to
prepare and encourage listeners to be active and curious
explorers, prepared to greet both the known and the unfamiliar
with engagement and insight.
One of the defining features of a musical performance is that, once it begins, it is unstoppable: Unlike a
book, it is not possible for the listener to pause, review
passages, or change the pace of unfolding. For these reasons,
listening to music requires a very special kind of focus.
Conventional musical attempts to develop this focus by
beginning with the smallest elements of music--chords, scales,
melodies and phrases--and eventually building into questions of the larger
musical form. The risk of this approach is that it conditions
listeners to focus primarily on the moment-to-moment progress of
the music: if the sounds are surprising or unconventional, listeners may easily get easily get thrown into confusion and lose track of what is happening. Sound
Reasoning takes a "top down" approach to listening:
It will show you how to stretch your awareness so that it takes
in the full expanse of a composition. Details will then be
contemplated with respect to how they contribute to the
developing form. The advantage of this approach is that you
will no longer be thrown off or disengaged by puzzling or
unexpected sounds. No matter how unusual or unusual the
music, you will be able to maintain your concentration and
actually experience the entire work.
Intuition and analysis are often regarded as opposing and
incompatible. Analysis is felt to fight spontaneity and deplete
one’s enjoyment. This is an unfortunate and misleading dichotomy. Intuition is speeded up thought: It is reasoning
that occurs too rapidly for us to be able to articulate it to
ourselves consciously. The purpose of analysis is to train our
intuition, so that our visceral responses arise from the most
comprehensive possible perceptions and understanding. At first, you
may have to study musical concepts very deliberately; over time,
however, these concepts will become part of your intuitive
framework. Done properly, analysis strengthens our intuition and
deepens our enjoyment.
Part of the purpose of the Connexions project is to invite
scholars to provide additional examples, both from within the
classical and modern repertoires, but also from jazz, folk
music, music of other traditions, and popular music. Ideally, a
large sampling of repertoires and styles will help demonstrate
the reach and relevance of the concepts we will discuss.
Each module presents a particular topic, illustrated with
musical examples. A "listening gallery" follows, in which
the student is asked put the concepts into practice by
interactively analyzing musical examples. Please feel
encouraged to listen to the examples as many times as you need.
Listeners sometimes shy away from highly unfamiliar music.
Sound Reasoning will show how much can be
gained even at a first hearing. If we are attracted to the music,
we will return to it for further, ever-deepening listenings. When we meet someone new at a party, a
whole life is concealed from us. An initial conversation may
inform us about the person's history, outlook, and character but
there are many discoveries to be made. Many years later, we may
look back at that first encounter and realize how little we yet
knew, how many revelations would occur later. So it is with
listening to music. It is impossible to develop a relationship
with a piece of music without a first hearing; it is impossible
to come to love something if we are not first prepared for it to
be new. Sound Reasoning is
designed to help you cultivate a lifelong intelligent and
passionate connection to music.