Let us imagine an aesthetics of music grounded in the notion of compression. Audio file-compression locates the point at which the granularity of the signal is of sufficient density to recreate sound, to give the illusion of an original indistinguishable from that of a higher-resolution reproduction. We might stipulate that the efficiency of perception is an aesthetic desideratum: the beautiful or well-formed is that which transmits musical information without waste, locates a “sweet spot” in the density of information. The flattened dynamics of commercial music could be said to be well formed, locating the ideal point in the dynamic range or the place of maximum efficiency. Should we be catholic in our definition of music, we could assert that the clarity of the cinematic soundscape (wherein everything is completely audible) is likewise efficient or ideal. From this a corollary: sound designed or rendered is to be preferred to “natural”...
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Spring 2014
Book Review|
April 01 2014
Review: The Psychophysical Ear: Music Experiments, Experimental Sounds, 1840–1910 by Alexandra Hui; Helmholtz and the Modern Listener by Benjamin Steege
The Psychophysical Ear: Music Experiments, Experimental Sounds, 1840–1910
, by Alexandra Hui. Transformations. Cambridge, MA
: MIT Press
, 2013
. xxii
, 233
pp.Helmholtz and the Modern Listener
, by Benjamin Steege. Cambridge and New York
: Cambridge University Press
, 2012
. xii
, 282
pp.
Leslie David Blasius
Leslie David Blasius
Leslie David Blasius is Professor of Music Theory at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. He is the author of two books, on the music theory of Heinrich Schenker and Godfrey Winham respectively, and of essays on the history and epistemology of music theory. He is currently working on a book on the aesthetics of electronic sound.
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Journal of the American Musicological Society (2014) 67 (1): 250–257.
Citation
Leslie David Blasius; Review: The Psychophysical Ear: Music Experiments, Experimental Sounds, 1840–1910 by Alexandra Hui; Helmholtz and the Modern Listener by Benjamin Steege. Journal of the American Musicological Society 1 April 2014; 67 (1): 250–257. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/jams.2014.67.1.250
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