Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Improvisation in Music and Philosophical Hermeneutics
View through CrossRef
In the first book to examine the overlooked relationship between musical improvisation and philosophical hermeneutics, Sam McAuliffe asks: what exactly is improvisation? And how does it relate to our being-in-the-world?
Improvisation in Music and Philosophical Hermeneutics answers these questions by investigating the underlying structure of improvisation. McAuliffe argues that improvising is best understood as attending and responding to the situation in which one find itself and, as such, is essential to how we engage with the world. Working within the hermeneutic philosophical tradition – drawing primarily on the work of Martin Heidegger, Hans-Georg Gadamer, and Jeff Malpas – this book provides a rich and detailed account of the ways in which we are all already experienced improvisers.
Given the dominance of music in discussions of improvisation, Part I of this book uses improvised musical performance as a case study to uncover the ontological structure of improvisation: a structure that McAuliffe demonstrates is identical to the structure of hermeneutic engagement. Exploring this relationship between improvisation and hermeneutics, Part II offers a new reading of Gadamer’s philosophical hermeneutics, examining the way in which Gadamer’s accounts of truth and understanding, language, and ethics each possess an essentially improvisational character.
Working between philosophy and music theory, Improvisation in Music and Philosophical Hermeneutics unveils the hermeneutic character of musical performance, the musicality of hermeneutic engagement, and the universality of improvisation.
Title: Improvisation in Music and Philosophical Hermeneutics
Description:
In the first book to examine the overlooked relationship between musical improvisation and philosophical hermeneutics, Sam McAuliffe asks: what exactly is improvisation? And how does it relate to our being-in-the-world?
Improvisation in Music and Philosophical Hermeneutics answers these questions by investigating the underlying structure of improvisation.
McAuliffe argues that improvising is best understood as attending and responding to the situation in which one find itself and, as such, is essential to how we engage with the world.
Working within the hermeneutic philosophical tradition – drawing primarily on the work of Martin Heidegger, Hans-Georg Gadamer, and Jeff Malpas – this book provides a rich and detailed account of the ways in which we are all already experienced improvisers.
Given the dominance of music in discussions of improvisation, Part I of this book uses improvised musical performance as a case study to uncover the ontological structure of improvisation: a structure that McAuliffe demonstrates is identical to the structure of hermeneutic engagement.
Exploring this relationship between improvisation and hermeneutics, Part II offers a new reading of Gadamer’s philosophical hermeneutics, examining the way in which Gadamer’s accounts of truth and understanding, language, and ethics each possess an essentially improvisational character.
Working between philosophy and music theory, Improvisation in Music and Philosophical Hermeneutics unveils the hermeneutic character of musical performance, the musicality of hermeneutic engagement, and the universality of improvisation.
Related Results
Billy Connolly, Daniel Barenboim, Willie Wonka, Jazz Bastards, and the Universality of Improvisation
Billy Connolly, Daniel Barenboim, Willie Wonka, Jazz Bastards, and the Universality of Improvisation
Group musical improvisation is an important artistic, educational, and therapeutic process, and understanding the unique mental, individual, and social processes involved should be...
(Re-)imagining improvisation
(Re-)imagining improvisation
What role does the concept of improvisation play in how we imagine ‘sameness’ and ‘difference’ in music? How do the verbal discourses around creative practice serve to mark musical...
Musical improvisation
Musical improvisation
Musical improvisation is, to many in the Western world, an activity shrouded in mystery. Most listeners are familiar with some genres of music in which improvisation is a commonpla...
Seeing Voices
Seeing Voices
Abstract
We often think of music in terms of sounds intentionally organized into patterns, but music performed in signed languages poses considerable challenges to t...
Theorizing Music Evolution
Theorizing Music Evolution
Abstract
Theorizing Music Evolution is a critical examination of ideas about musical origins, emphasizing nineteenth-century theories of music in the evolutionist wr...
Experimentation and Improvisation in Bogotá at the End of the Twentieth Century
Experimentation and Improvisation in Bogotá at the End of the Twentieth Century
This chapter explores how experimentation and improvisation became meaningful within the Colombian Western academic tradition. Acosta provides a musicological report of the evoluti...
Germaine de Staël’s and the Early Usage of Improvisation in English
Germaine de Staël’s and the Early Usage of Improvisation in English
This chapter describes the emergence of the terminology of improvisation in the English language. Terms relating to improvisation began to appear in the eighteenth century and came...
David Bowie and the Art of Music Video
David Bowie and the Art of Music Video
The first in-depth study of David Bowie’s music videos across a sustained period takes on interweaving storyworlds of an iconic career. Remarkable for their capacity to conjure ela...

