Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Music As Extended Agency: On Notation And Entextualization IN Improvised Music
View through CrossRef
ABSTRACT
This article presents results from fieldwork with two groups of improvisers using different forms of notation in their creative practice. Such practices raise fundamental questions about the relation of notation to performance. Drawing on theories of entextualization in linguistic anthropology, I argue that, contrary to many arguments for a performative understanding of music, performance is partly about creating something that has an identifiable existence, transcending space and time. The notations and compositional systems used by improvisers are a means of achieving this entextualization of their musical utterances. One of the main findings of my fieldwork was that improvisers frequently speak of acting ‘in service of the music’, a phrase commonly associated with composition-centred musical discourse. Drawing on the work of Karin Barber and Alfred Gell, I argue that this idea represents a process of entextualization that is not a negation of performers’ creative agency, but an extension of it.
Title: Music As Extended Agency: On Notation And Entextualization IN Improvised Music
Description:
ABSTRACT
This article presents results from fieldwork with two groups of improvisers using different forms of notation in their creative practice.
Such practices raise fundamental questions about the relation of notation to performance.
Drawing on theories of entextualization in linguistic anthropology, I argue that, contrary to many arguments for a performative understanding of music, performance is partly about creating something that has an identifiable existence, transcending space and time.
The notations and compositional systems used by improvisers are a means of achieving this entextualization of their musical utterances.
One of the main findings of my fieldwork was that improvisers frequently speak of acting ‘in service of the music’, a phrase commonly associated with composition-centred musical discourse.
Drawing on the work of Karin Barber and Alfred Gell, I argue that this idea represents a process of entextualization that is not a negation of performers’ creative agency, but an extension of it.
Related Results
Connecting player and character agency in videogames
Connecting player and character agency in videogames
In game studies, ‘agency’ is typically defined in terms of the ‘choices’ or ‘freedom’ granted to the player, which prioritises the influence of ludology on player engagement while ...
Melodrama of Possessive Agency
Melodrama of Possessive Agency
In the last decades, streams within posthumanism and new materialism, have turned their attention to the phenomenon of agency. And they have done so in ways which open the phenomen...
Retuning music teaching: Online music tutorials preferences as predictors of amateur musicians’ music self-efficacy in informal music learning
Retuning music teaching: Online music tutorials preferences as predictors of amateur musicians’ music self-efficacy in informal music learning
Music self-efficacy has been acknowledged as a strong predictor of successful performance among musicians and music students, but is less researched among amateur musicians. The pu...
Entrepreneurists and Firmists: Knight vs. The Modern Theory of the Firm
Entrepreneurists and Firmists: Knight vs. The Modern Theory of the Firm
Frank Knight was a “grand theorist.” Like other grand theorists from Adam Smith to Friedrich A. Hayek, his interests extended beyond economics. In economics, his major writings foc...
Notation by Context: Digital Scenography as Artifact of Authorial Intent
Notation by Context: Digital Scenography as Artifact of Authorial Intent
Digital technology can be used as a scenographic tool to project visual settings in the theatrical space. However, digital scenography that incorporates “faux-interactivity,” or th...
Hearing functional harmony in jazz: A perceptual study of music-theoretical accounts of extended tonality
Hearing functional harmony in jazz: A perceptual study of music-theoretical accounts of extended tonality
Functional harmony is an integral part of many repertoires in the Western musical practices, including both diatonic and extended tonality. In the latter context, music-theoretical...
L’échantillonnage dans l’improvisation : Rencontre de deux instigateurs du free jazz avec un jeune artiste de la scène noise à New York
L’échantillonnage dans l’improvisation : Rencontre de deux instigateurs du free jazz avec un jeune artiste de la scène noise à New York
In this paper we report on an experimental study that brought two free jazz instigators, the drummer Todd Capp and multi-instrumentalist Daniel Carter, to musically meet Mikey Holm...