1st Edition

Music Performance Encounters Collaborations and Confrontations

Edited By John Koslovsky, Michiel Schuijer Copyright 2024
244 Pages 102 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

244 Pages 102 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

244 Pages 102 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Why do most musical performers and musical researchers continue to inhabit divergent epistemic spaces? To what extent is the act of musical performance coextensive with the act of doing musical research, and vice versa? At what point in the research process can a performative act transform into a scholarly one, and a scholarly act into a performative one? These, and other related questions, form... Read more

Introduction

"Who Are You?": On Performers, Scholars, Masters, and Pupils

Michiel Schuijer and John Koslovsky

 

Critical Interlude 1

John Koslovsky

 

Part I: Tools of (Historical) Performance Practice

1) "Che hanno contrapunto": Counterpoint Training and the Performance of Diminution in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries

Catherine Motuz and Josué Meléndez Pelaez

2) The Italian Imitative and Interdisciplinary Musical Ethos of the Sixteenth Century: Ganassi's La Fontegara

Nuno Atalaia and Tímea Nagy

3) Echos of Cor Alto and Cor Basse: In Search of an Ideal Horn Sound

Kathryn Zevenbergen and Teunis van der Zwart

 

Critical Interlude 2

John Koslovsky

 

Part II: Scholars and Performers in Dialogue

4) Analysing and Playing Chopin’s Nocturne Op. 27, no. 1: An Empirical Study of the Interaction between an Analyst and a Performer

Luca Marconi and Stefano Malferrari

5) Resonant Openings: Collaborating on Crumb’s Nocturnes

Michiko Theurer and Daphne Leong

 

Critical Interlude 3

Michiel Schuijer

 

Part III: Institutional Endeavours

6) The Absent Teacher Approach

Job ter Haar, Michalis Cholevas and Juliano Abramovay

7) Preparing Music Students for a Public Recital: Applying Principles of Practice from Sport Sciences and Other Disciplines

Frank C. Bakker, Jan Kouwenhoven, Valle González Martín and Raôul R.D. Oudejans

Critical Interlude 4

Michiel Schuijer

 

Part IV: Cultural Barriers and Embodied Knowledge

8) Knowing the World through Music

Barbara Titus, Shishani Vranckx and Bart Fermie

9) Performing Jennifer Walshe’s SELF-CARE

Andreas Borregaard

Biography

John Koslovsky is a professor of music history, theory, and analysis at KU Leuven (since fall 2023). From 2010 to 2023, he was on the music theory and research faculties at the Conservatorium van Amsterdam and was an affiliate researcher in the humanities at Utrecht University. His research deals with the history of music theory, Schenkerian analysis, music aesthetics, intertextuality, and performance studies.

Michiel Schuijer is a musicologist and music theorist, and currently head of the research division at the Conservatorium van Amsterdam. In his research, he explores historical, sociological, and cultural perspectives on music theory. His book Analyzing Atonal Music: Pitch-Class Set Theory and Its Contexts (2008) was awarded the American Society for Music Theory Emerging Scholar Award in 2010. Recent research interests include evolving notions of professionalism in music and the role of heritage in musical culture. From 2020 through 2023, Schuijer was project leader of the Academy for Musicology and Musicianship (Amsterdam, Utrecht), a study programme combining the strengths of conservatory and university education.