Raymond Monelle
Raymond Monelle
Raymond Monelle
Robert S. Hatten
T
HE AUTHOR OF THESE ESSAYS, Professor of Music at the
University of Edinburgh, is well known to music semioticians in-
ternationally as a keynote speaker or invited lecturer throughout
Europe and North America. He is also a recognized scholar of eighteenth-
century music. But those music theorists and musicologists who have not
encountered his insightful survey, Linguistics and Semiotics in Music (1992),
may not appreciate his role as one of the leading music semiotic theorists
of our time. If that volume signaled Raymond Monelle’s authorial presence
with an absorbing exploratory essay on deconstruction in music, the pres-
ent book of essays, devoted entirely to his own theoretical work and spec-
ulation, marks the emergence of a unique voice and indeed a new direction
for music semiotics. If Nattiez (1975) introduced the first stage of formal-
ist music semiotics, and Tarasti (1994), Hatten (1994), and Lidov (1999)
contributed toward a second stage that reconciled the structuralist with the
hermeneutic in interpreting musical meaning, then Monelle’s essays could
be said to mark the third stage, or staging, in which semiotic theory con-
fronts postmodernism and emerges as viable, even after relinquishing the
hitherto unacknowledged hegemony of its structuralist core.*
Monelle moves from traditional semiotic concerns with topics and tropes
to postmodern concerns with the work as text, modes of temporality as they
affect musical form and genre, the construction of subjectivity, and the de-
construction of ideology. The strain of these competing strategies is often
foregrounded with cunning self-consciousness, as Monelle thematizes the
theoretical conflicts he finds, and one can only admire the reflexive moves
by which he draws out the best from each encounter. Indeed, the courage
to embrace the multiple perspectives of postmodern thought in a series of
mutually supportive essays can be seen as more heroic than the erection of
a single, overarching scheme. Although Monelle decries the totalizing ten-
Bloomington, Indiana
November 1999