Authenticities: Philosophical Reflections on Musical Performance

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Cornell University Press, 1995 - Music - 299 pages

"In his latest book on the aesthetics of music, Peter Kivy presents an argument not for authenticity but for authenticities of performance, including authenticities of intention, sound, practice, and the authenticity of personal interpretation in performance.... As usual, Kivy's work is beautifully written, well argued, and provocative."--Notes"Kivy has provided a sorely needed framework for all future discussion of the authenticity matter. This is his best book, a major contribution to performance studies and to musical aesthetics; likely it will be studied and cited for generations."--Choice"Written in lively prose, with a keen sense of reality, [this volume] ought to be of interest not only to philosophers and musicologists, but to all serious lovers of music."--Roger Scruton, Times Literary Supplement"The consistent theme running through Kivy's book is the need for interpretation as the personal authenticity and authority of the performer against the ideology both of the composer as genius and of the puritanical devotion to the authority of the text of the early music devotees.... This is a most valuable book, one which constantly surprises and delights through its philosophical insights and informed musical understanding."--British Journal of Aesthetics

 

Contents

ONE The Concept of Authenticity
1
Two Authenticity as Intention
9
THREE Authenticity as Sound
47
FOUR Authenticity as Practice
80
FIVE The Other Authenticity
108
SIX The Authority of Intention
145
SEVEN The Authority of Sound
188
EIGHT The Authority of Practice
233
NINE The Other Authority
260
Bibliography
287
Index
293
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About the author (1995)

Peter Kivy is Professor of Philosophy at Rutgers University. His previous books include Music Alone: Philosophical Reflections on the Purely Musical Experience, also from Cornell.

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