Some convictions Edward Cone raises
about music
- There
have been successful attempts of a completely saturated form arising from
an unpromising hypothesis
- Cone
applies 3 principles to music: polar tension, the fusion by mutual analogy
and of saturation. The first two must be stressed at the outset.
- The
unity of a musical composition must be perceptible within the medium; it
must be heard
- The
apparent simple surface of some music may in fact conceal great richness.
(e.g. a Bach Prelude)
- Since
music is a temporal art, certain possibilities are open to it that are
unavailable to painting.
- We
hear words and music together as forming some sort of unity. Music and
words appear to be, not parallel structures but 2 aspects of a single
organism. For this reason the text and setting of the best songs give the
illusion of being “twinborn” even when not actually so. Words and music
properly combined produce no conflict of attention in the listener.
- Romantic
melodrama (opera) attempted in a thorough-going was to create a musical
accompaniment expressively paralleling the text; but turned out to be only
program music with the program read aloud.
- The
unresolved tension between word and tone makes it impossible for the
listener to attend to both. There are exceptions but it requires careful
musical and dramatic preparation. Cone gives the opera Fidelio by Beethoven and Der Freischutz by Carl Von Weber as
examples.
- It is
thus not simply the combination of elements that gives opera its peculiar
fascination; it is the fusion produced by the mutual analogy of the words
and music—a union further enriched and clarified by the visual action.
Return to Syllabus