Affiliation:
1. University of Lisbon, Faculty of Letters, Language, Mind and Cognition Research Group (LanCog), Lisbon, Portugal
Abstract
This paper discusses the state-of-the-art dispute over the ontological
question of rock music: what is the work of art, or the central work-kind,
of rock music, if any? And, is the work of rock music ontologically distinct
from the work of classical music, which is the only musical tradition whose
ontology is vastly studied? First, I distinguish between two levels of
inquiry in musical ontology: the fundamental level and the higher-order
level, in which comparative ontology - the project in which someone engages
by considering that there is ontological variety among works of distinct
musical traditions - falls. After addressing two general questions about
rock music, I turn to Theodore Gracyk?s ontological account of rock music,
according to which the primary focus of critical attention in rock music are
recordings, or recorded tracks. This view has the consequence that
?recordings? is a fundamental concept of philosophy of music, necessary for
us to understand rock music. Stephen Davies objected that Gracyk?s account
fails to assign appropriate value to a valuable practice with which rock
audiences are committed, live performance, and argued that the works of rock
music are of the ontological kind for studio performance. Finally, Andrew
Kania synthetized both views: rock recorded tracks are at the centre of rock
as an art form, thus being the rock works.
Publisher
National Library of Serbia
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Philosophy
Cited by
1 articles.
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