Music represents one of humanity's most vivid contemplations on the nature of time itself. The ways that music can modify, intensify, and even dismantle our understanding of time's passing is at the foundation of musical experience, and is common to listeners, composers, and performers alike. The Oxford Handbook of Time in Music provides a range of compelling new scholarship that examines the making of musical time, its effects and structures. Bringing together philosophical, psychological, and socio-cultural understandings of time in music, the chapters highlight the act of 'making' not just as cultural construction but also in terms of the perceptual, cognitive underpinnings that allow us to 'make' sense of time in music. Thus, the Handbook is a unique synthesis of divergent perspectives on the nature of time in music. With its focus on contemporary music (while paying attention to some of the generative temporalities of the nineteenth century), the volume establishes the richness and complexity of so much current music-making and in the process overcomes historic demarcations between art and popular musics.
About the AuthorMark Doffman is Programme Director, MA Psychology of Music at the University of Sheffield. Emily Payne is Lecturer in Music at the University of Leeds and Assistant Editor of the journal Music & Science. Toby Young is Leverhulme Early Career Research Fellow at the Guildhall.
Book InformationISBN 9780190947279
Author Mark DoffmanFormat Hardback
Page Count 616
Imprint Oxford University Press IncPublisher Oxford University Press Inc
Weight(grams) 1g
Dimensions(mm) 182mm * 250mm * 36mm