Raymond Monelle

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FOREWORD

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-

* Jean-Jacques Nattiez, Fondements d’une sémiologie de la musique (Paris: Union générale


d’éditions, 1975); Eero Tarasti, A Theory of Musical Semiotics (Bloomington: Indiana Univer-
sity Press, 1994); Robert S. Hatten, Musical Meaning in Beethoven: Markedness, Correlation, and
Interpretation (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1994); David Lidov, Elements of Semi-
otics (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1999). For an earlier work that attempts the bridge from
formal semiotics to postmodernism, see Robert Samuels, Mahler’s Sixth Symphony: A Study in
Musical Semiotics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995).
xii FOREWORD

dencies of any theoretical approach, semiotic or otherwise, his essays nev-


ertheless contribute a series of interpretations of music from Bach to Ives
that are grounded in the plausibilities of careful semiotic speculation and
supported by an impressive array of historical evidence. They also add up
to more than the sum of their parts, by addressing many of the central prob-
lems that any presumably comprehensive theory of music would need to
confront.
After an introductory chapter that sets the tone for a more postmodern
approach, the first two essays offer a welcome critique of topic theory, care-
fully delineating errors in Leonard Ratner’s primary source attributions,
and providing culturally, historically, and theoretically rich case studies of
particular topics. Striking among these is the attention devoted to teasing
out the specific motivations for assigning expressive meaning to galloping
motives, with special attention to their association with the “noble horse”.
As a model for the kind of careful cultural work every topic deserves, these
two essays will repay close study by any “new musicologists”. Semiotically,
Monelle offers a fresh way to conceive the significance of topical types,
through the “indexicality of the object”—that is, through the associations
that accrue to the object of signification. In this way he ties interpretation
to the semiotically recoverable cultural practices of a given stylistic period.
Modes of temporality are the central concern of the next two chapters,
which provide a fresh account of style change as it relates to genre, synthe-
sizing insights from cultural and literary sources with those from analysis
and the history of theory. By relating A. B. Marx’s opposition of Satz and
Gang to the temporal modes of lyrical evocation and narrative progression,
Monelle is able to suggest the crosscurrents affecting change of genre and
form in the early nineteenth century. Of special interest is the case of the
finale of Schumann’s Second Symphony, in which Monelle goes further
than Anthony Newcomb’s archetypal plots to uncover a self-conscious de-
construction of the problematic oppositions underlying competing ap-
proaches to form. That Schumann could have featured this conflict as the-
matic to the work, and recognized the danger of lyric evocation as it tends
to subvert ongoing formal structure, suggests one of the more subtle ways
in which nineteenth-century composers constructed subjectivity in their
works. Indeed, the symphony is a genre that Monelle insightfully links to
the literary genre of the nineteenth-century novel, where struggles with
modes of temporal expressiveness are often thematic. The achievements of
Brahms and Dvořák in coping with this issue are contrasted with Monelle’s
view of Tchaikovsky’s failure to reconcile structure (narrative progression)
and genre (evocation). The swamping of structure by sentimentality finds
a new explanation in Monelle’s semiotic framing.
It is this textual kind of subjectivity that leads to the insights of the next
two chapters, in which the composer’s voice plays an increasingly impor-
FOREWORD xiii
tant role. Here, the heroes are Mahler, whose protean subjectivity ranges
from the voice of Nature, to that of an idealized Volk, to that of an apolo-
gist for Nietzschean philosophy, and Mahler’s American counterpart, Ives,
whose problematic subjectivities are treated to a deconstructive critique
that may surprise the reader in its shifting affiliations. Ives’s own ideologi-
cal commitments, as expressed in his “Essays before a Sonata” but also more
tellingly in his approach to composition, provide ample evidence for a va-
riety of postmodern interpretations, and Monelle draws out the philosoph-
ical implications of each. The inspiration of Michel Foucault is apparent in
Monelle’s search for an alternative episteme, or regulatory signifying prac-
tice, to justify the seemingly incomprehensible actions of a composer such
as Ives—for whom scores are not adequate representations of perfor-
mances, and performances are not restricted to sounds.
But despite the search for new forms of theory adequate to the demands
of modern music, and the postmodern quest for a truly speculative theory
for music of all eras, semiotics is not displaced to the margins; rather, the
margins are opened to a more flexible semiotic inquiry that integrates his-
torical and cultural evidence with music theoretical and semiotic analysis,
while interrogating the presuppositions and underlying ideologies of both
music and method. In his virtuoso performance, Raymond Monelle has
modeled a new kind of semiotic discursive practice, driven by theoretical
problems but not constrained by the blind spots of a single theoretical po-
sition. Thus, the only way for scholars to follow Monelle’s lead is to accept
their own responsibility for leadership. If as a result the lineaments of a
more global approach are glimpsed, it will be one that has absorbed the
intellectual energies of postmodernism without falling into the abyss of
its relativisms and indeterminacies. Semiotics, in this sense, can be viewed
as an endlessly emerging discipline, one whose pursuit of signification in
all its forms can accommodate the philosophical urgencies of a critical
postmodernism.

Bloomington, Indiana
November 1999

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