Books by David Trippett
This volume seeks to offer a new approach to the study of music through the lens of recent works ... more This volume seeks to offer a new approach to the study of music through the lens of recent works in science and technology studies (STS), which propose that facts are neither absolute truths, nor completely relative, but emerge from an intensely collective process of construction. Applied to the study of music, this approach enables us to reconcile the human, social, factual, and technological aspects of the musical world, and opens the prospect of new areas of inquiry in musicology and sound studies. Rethinking Music through Science and Technology Studies draws together a wide range of both leading and emerging scholars to offer a critical survey of STS applications to music studies, considering topics ranging from classical music instrument-making to the ethos of DIY in punk music. The book's four sections focus on key areas of music study that are impacted by STS: organology, sound studies, music history, and epistemology. Raising crucial methodological and epistemological questions about the study of music, this book will be relevant to scholars studying the interactions between music, culture, and technology from many disciplinary perspectives. Antoine Hennion is Professor at Mines ParisTech, and the former Director of the Centre for the Sociology of Innovation. He has written extensively on the sociology of music, media, and cultural industries. Christophe Levaux is a lecturer and postdoctoral researcher at the University of Liège, Belgium. His research focuses on approaches to 20th-century American music and Actor-Network Theory.
Liszt Ferenc: Sardanapalo, Act 1 (Fragment), 2019
The critical edition of Franz Liszt's unfinished opera, published by the Neue Liszt Ausgabe (Edit... more The critical edition of Franz Liszt's unfinished opera, published by the Neue Liszt Ausgabe (Editio Musica Budapest). With reconstructed libretto, ossias, realizations of patterns, and various deleted and metrically variant passages.
This critical edition includes a detailed study on the genesis of Liszt’s _Sardanapalo_ in English, German, and Hungarian, the libretto in the original Italian as well as in English, German, and Hungarian translation, several facsimile pages of Liszt’s manuscript, and a detailed Critical Report.
https://www.kotta.info/en/product/20017A/LISZT-FERENC-Sardanapalo-Act-1-Fragment
The Cambridge Companion to MUSIC IN DIGITAL CULTURE, 2019
The impact of digital technologies on music has been overwhelming: since the commercialisation of... more The impact of digital technologies on music has been overwhelming: since the commercialisation of these technologies in the early 1980s, both the practice of music and thinking about it have changed almost beyond all recognition. From the rise of digital music making to digital dissemination, these changes have attracted considerable academic attention across disciplines,within, but also beyond, established areas of academic musical research. Through chapters by scholars at the forefront of research and shorter 'personal takes' from knowledgeable practitioners in the field, this Companion brings the relationship between digital technology and musical culture alive by considering both theory and practice. It provides a comprehensive and balanced introduction to the place of music within digital culture as a whole, with recurring themes and topics that include music and the Internet, social networking and participatory culture, music recommendation systems, virtuality, posthumanism, surveillance, copyright, and new business models for music production.
Nineteenth-Century Opera and the Scientific Imagination, 2019
Scientific thinking has long been linked to music theory and instrument making, yet the profound ... more Scientific thinking has long been linked to music theory and instrument making, yet the profound and often surprising intersections between the sciences and opera during the long nineteenth century are here explored for the first time. These touch on a wide variety of topics, including vocal physiology, theories of listening and sensory communication, technologies of theatrical machinery and discourses of biological degeneration. Taken together, the chapters reveal an intertwined cultural history that extends from backstage hydraulics to drawing-room hypnotism, and from laryngoscopy to theatrical aeronautics. Situated at the intersection of opera studies and the history of science, the book therefore offers a novel and illuminating set of case studies, of a kind that will appeal to historians of both science and opera, and of European culture more generally from the French Revolution to the end of the Victorian period.
Since the 1840s, critics have lambasted Wagner for lacking the ability to compose melody. But for... more Since the 1840s, critics have lambasted Wagner for lacking the ability to compose melody. But for him, melody was fundamental—“music’s only form.” This incongruity testifies to the surprising difficulties during the nineteenth century of conceptualizing melody. Despite its indispensable place in opera, contemporary theorists were unable even to agree on a definition for it, let alone formulate a stable basis for teaching it. In Wagner's Melodies, Trippett re-examines Wagner's central aesthetic claims, placing the composer's ideas about melody in the context of the scientific discourse of his age: from the emergence of the Natural Sciences and historical linguistics to sources about music's stimulation of the body, and inventions for “automatic” composition. Interweaving a rich variety of material from the history of science, music theory, music criticism, private correspondence and court reports, Trippett uncovers a new and controversial discourse that placed melody at the apex of artistic self-consciousness, and generated problems of urgent dimensions for German music aesthetics.
""The Origins of Music was first published in German in 1911. In this text, Carl Stumpf sets out ... more ""The Origins of Music was first published in German in 1911. In this text, Carl Stumpf sets out a path-breaking hypothesis about the earliest musical sounds in human culture: the perception of perfect consonances, fixed intervals, and the ability to transpose. Alongside his research in such diverse fields as classical philosophy, acoustics, and mathematics, Stumpf became one of the most influential psychologists of the late 19th century. He was the founding father of Gestalt psychology, and a collaborator with William James, Edmund Husserl, and Wolfgang Köhler.
The book was the culmination of more than 25 years of empirical and theoretical research in the field of music. In the first part of the book, Stumpf discusses the origin and forms of musical activities as well as various existing theories on the origin of music, including those of Darwin, Rousseau, Herder, and Spencer. In the second part of the book, he summarizes his works on the historical development of instruments and music, and compares a putatively global range of musics from non-European cultures with a view to demonstrating the psychological principles of tonal organization, as well as providing a range of cross-cultural musical transcriptions and analyses. This became a foundation document for comparative musicology, the elder sibling to modern Ethnomusicology, and the original recordings Stumpf used in this process are given in an appended CD.
Available for the first time in the English language, The Origins of Music will be a fascinating volume for all those with an interest in the history of psychology and music. It appears here in tandem with Self-Disclosure, Stumpf's autobiography of 1924, in which he outlines the rich life experiences behind his research career alongside his own explanation of his scientific and cultural legacy.""
radio broadcasts by David Trippett
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b04pc7w4
Philosopher Angie Hobbs is interested in Plato's idea... more http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b04pc7w4
Philosopher Angie Hobbs is interested in Plato's idea that there is a relationship between beauty and morality. The idea that goodness is beautiful and evil things are ugly is written deep into our culture. But Plato's ideas also suggest that beautiful things could not be appreciated by evil people. Can that idea really survive the image of a Nazi Camp Commandment listening to classical music?
Papers by David Trippett
The Cambridge Companion to Music in Digital Culture
Cambridge University Press eBooks, Mar 14, 2024
The Origins of Music, 2012
The Musical Quarterly, 2017
Nineteenth-Century Opera and the Scientific Imagination, 2019
At first sight, opera and science would seem to occupy quite separate spaces. The one typically u... more At first sight, opera and science would seem to occupy quite separate spaces. The one typically unfolds on the stage of a theatre, the other most often takes place in a laboratory or lecture hall. The one draws on creative inspiration in entwining music, poetry and spectacle, the other on inductive reasoning through observation and experiment; patient activities that, for John Herschel in 1831, constituted the ‘fountains of all natural science’. And while the one offers an opportunity for emotional and intellectual engagement through the public gaze, the other cautiously validates the empiricism of verifiable experience through critical acts of witnessing. To yoke the two together, then, may appear arbitrary. Yet such a view not only risks caricature through its stark oppositions, but also overlooks a scene of rich interconnection within nineteenthcentury European social and intellectual life. To start at the biographical level, we find a famous scientist such as Michael Faraday not...
Lexikon Schriften über Musik, 2023
Lexikon Schriften über Musik, 2023
Melody is a fundamental concept in Western musical thought; it connotes the form and affective po... more Melody is a fundamental concept in Western musical thought; it connotes the form and affective power of successive sounds in motion, perceived as an aesthetic unity. Yet for many writers, melody does not exist as an autonomous form, and for those who credit its existence, few agree on what it is, or how it functions in relation to harmonic voice leading and phrase rhythm. This chapter examines the historical emergence of a theory of melody in the West, from Aristoxenus to Leonard Bernstein; it traces the rich intellectual currents that saw melody variously coupled to ideas of voice, schemes of rhythmic symmetry, overtones, spatial organization, theories of evolution, and computational analysis.
19th-Century Music, 2019
In 1878, at the height of his fame, Helmholtz asked what was objective in perception, declaring t... more In 1878, at the height of his fame, Helmholtz asked what was objective in perception, declaring that—in contrast to empirical science—it is the “artist [who] has beheld the real.” His lecture sought to show how sensory perception can be law-like, and how the effects of art are ultimately grounded in such law-likeness. Such a claim for an objective measure of perception was not unprecedented, yet it failed to distinguish cleanly between what is objective and what is real, opening up a discursive space regarding what sound “is,” and what its objective perception may be. Its arguments followed calls for “a science of beauty” based on number, and was motivated, in part, by Helmholtz's attempt to distance himself from the “weaknesses of Romanticism.” This articles argues that Helmholtz's bold claims were only possible on the basis of the writings of German materialists during the 1840s and 50s, and because sound had been figured for decades as an ambiguous object. On this basis, ...
The Materialist Turn With the death of Foucault in 1984, investigations of the body's social cons... more The Materialist Turn With the death of Foucault in 1984, investigations of the body's social construction, the body "as object and target of power," proliferated across humanist disciplines (Foucault 1977, 136). Methodologically, these were reliant on text criticism, the scrutiny of source documents, and the silence of historical objects. Approaches to knowledge about our physical matter have remained traditionally rooted in this sense, relishing the afterglow of a long-running and professionally captivating "linguistic turn" in academe that sought to understand all human thought and activity as structured by, and analogous to, linguistic systems. Alongside this text rootedness, an umbrella of alternative approaches emerged from the counterimpulse to seek sources of knowledge from the raw physicality of the subject and its modes of sensory communication; here we might look to the "materialities of communication" from first-generation media theorists (Gumbrecht and Pfeifer 1994), "thing" theory (Brown 2001), "affect" theory (Massumi 1995, 2010), and "new materialism" more broadly, including Bruno Latour's argument that "objects too have agency" (Latour 2005; Gell 1998), and the corollary that matter itself-including our biological mass-is comprised of animate agents independent of human cognition, intellectual freedom, and intentionality, that is, those cherished threads running through the woof of intellectual history (Coole and Frost 2010; Bennett 2010).
Cambridge Opera Journal, 2014
Wagner’s vaunted model of artistic synthesis persists in scholarly assessments of his work. But a... more Wagner’s vaunted model of artistic synthesis persists in scholarly assessments of his work. But at its centre, the composer argued that the media of voice and orchestra do not mix: they retain their identities as separate channels of sound that can neither duplicate nor substitute for one another. Taking as a starting point Wagner’s claims for the non-adaptability of media, this article addresses the adaptation of Wagner’s music to the modern digital technologies of HD cinema and video game. Drawing on a wide circle of writers, from Schiller and Žižek to Bakhtin, Augé, Baudrillard and second-generation media theorists, it interrogates the concept of ‘reality’ within live acoustic performance, both historically, as a discursive concept, and technologically, via the sensory realism of digital simulcasting and telepresence. The philosophical opposition of appearance and reality fails when reality is defined by the intimate simulation of a sensory event as it is registered on the body. ...
Journal of the Royal Musical Association, 2018
In 1850, after five years of planning, Liszt began composing music for his Italian opera, Sardana... more In 1850, after five years of planning, Liszt began composing music for his Italian opera, Sardanapalo, after Byron. It was central to his ambition to attain status as a European composer, but he abandoned the project halfway through. La Mara (1911), Humphrey Searle (1954) and others declared the manuscript fragmentary and partially illegible, but in 2016 this verdict was categorically overturned when work began on an edition of what Liszt notated: almost the entirety of Act 1. This article draws on an array of sources – published and unpublished – significantly to update our knowledge of the circumstances surrounding Liszt’s composition and abandonment of Sardanapalo. In light of his inconsistently Italianate music and idiosyncratic treatment of the libretto, it also reinterprets Liszt’s mid-century aesthetic orientation, as a confidant of Wagner and would-be pillar of Franz Brendel’s future neudeutsche Schule. By contextualizing key aspects of the uncovered musical score and libret...
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Books by David Trippett
This critical edition includes a detailed study on the genesis of Liszt’s _Sardanapalo_ in English, German, and Hungarian, the libretto in the original Italian as well as in English, German, and Hungarian translation, several facsimile pages of Liszt’s manuscript, and a detailed Critical Report.
https://www.kotta.info/en/product/20017A/LISZT-FERENC-Sardanapalo-Act-1-Fragment
The book was the culmination of more than 25 years of empirical and theoretical research in the field of music. In the first part of the book, Stumpf discusses the origin and forms of musical activities as well as various existing theories on the origin of music, including those of Darwin, Rousseau, Herder, and Spencer. In the second part of the book, he summarizes his works on the historical development of instruments and music, and compares a putatively global range of musics from non-European cultures with a view to demonstrating the psychological principles of tonal organization, as well as providing a range of cross-cultural musical transcriptions and analyses. This became a foundation document for comparative musicology, the elder sibling to modern Ethnomusicology, and the original recordings Stumpf used in this process are given in an appended CD.
Available for the first time in the English language, The Origins of Music will be a fascinating volume for all those with an interest in the history of psychology and music. It appears here in tandem with Self-Disclosure, Stumpf's autobiography of 1924, in which he outlines the rich life experiences behind his research career alongside his own explanation of his scientific and cultural legacy.""
radio broadcasts by David Trippett
Philosopher Angie Hobbs is interested in Plato's idea that there is a relationship between beauty and morality. The idea that goodness is beautiful and evil things are ugly is written deep into our culture. But Plato's ideas also suggest that beautiful things could not be appreciated by evil people. Can that idea really survive the image of a Nazi Camp Commandment listening to classical music?
Papers by David Trippett
This critical edition includes a detailed study on the genesis of Liszt’s _Sardanapalo_ in English, German, and Hungarian, the libretto in the original Italian as well as in English, German, and Hungarian translation, several facsimile pages of Liszt’s manuscript, and a detailed Critical Report.
https://www.kotta.info/en/product/20017A/LISZT-FERENC-Sardanapalo-Act-1-Fragment
The book was the culmination of more than 25 years of empirical and theoretical research in the field of music. In the first part of the book, Stumpf discusses the origin and forms of musical activities as well as various existing theories on the origin of music, including those of Darwin, Rousseau, Herder, and Spencer. In the second part of the book, he summarizes his works on the historical development of instruments and music, and compares a putatively global range of musics from non-European cultures with a view to demonstrating the psychological principles of tonal organization, as well as providing a range of cross-cultural musical transcriptions and analyses. This became a foundation document for comparative musicology, the elder sibling to modern Ethnomusicology, and the original recordings Stumpf used in this process are given in an appended CD.
Available for the first time in the English language, The Origins of Music will be a fascinating volume for all those with an interest in the history of psychology and music. It appears here in tandem with Self-Disclosure, Stumpf's autobiography of 1924, in which he outlines the rich life experiences behind his research career alongside his own explanation of his scientific and cultural legacy.""
Philosopher Angie Hobbs is interested in Plato's idea that there is a relationship between beauty and morality. The idea that goodness is beautiful and evil things are ugly is written deep into our culture. But Plato's ideas also suggest that beautiful things could not be appreciated by evil people. Can that idea really survive the image of a Nazi Camp Commandment listening to classical music?
On this basis, the article considers the role of sound within epistemological debates over sense perception and concepts of the real during the later nineteenth century. It examines the ways in which sound’s abstract character became co-opted within Anglo-German discourse concerning objective perception and the scientifically real, initially through the lens of Helmholtz’s 1878 lecture, but later broadening this focus to include the mid-century architects of a philosophical materialism, as well as their detractors. A closing case study, a closely documented wager between a geologist and a philosopher about the “real” of sound ca. 1850, demonstrates the imaginative uses of sound as a metonym for philosophical debate. This raises questions about the relation of sensation and number, the contested affinity between sound and concepts of the absolute, and the underlying desire to possess objects of sensory experience.
Between 1876 and 1894, prominent acousticians argued that humans could hear as high as 40,960Hz. While this was ultimately discredited, recent post-tonal works have notated pitches that explicitly play with, or exceed, the ordinary range of human hearing (cf. Schoenberg, Per Nørgård, and Salvatore Sciarrino). This article asks what kind of listener such works imply.
Amid recent moves toward sound as vibrational force, it argues that hearing has a special role in determining our natural sensory limits and human identity, and that attempts to push against these limits foreground the underlying matter of what status the biological body has for performance and the perception of music if the body constitutes an assemblage subject to variation. In a historical critique of auditory sense augmentation, it principally contrasts Jakob von Uexküll’s theory of Umwelt with a transhumanist worldview which anticipates—and for some, already realizes—the enhancement of biological sense capacities through technology.
The discourse of transhumanism poses questions for musical listening as soon as the body becomes an assemblage subject to variation. It raises the question of how identity—ours as well as that of musical works—might be affected by “morphological freedom,” the extent to which self-identity becomes the lost referential when agency is distributed between biological and non-biological parts, and it asks what value are the new intellectual vistas that emerge when musical experience is conceived in material terms as communication between bodies.
https://humanitiesfutures.org/papers/towards-materialist-history-music-histories-sensation/