Music and Text: Critical Inquiries.
Winn, James Anderson
In his introduction to Music and Text, Steven Scher declares that
its fourteen essays "demonstrate how musical and literary studies
can combine forces effectively on the common ground of contemporary
critical theory and interpretive practice" (p. xiv). As the authors
in this collection too rarely acknowledge, other "common
grounds" are possible. For the scholar engaged in studying the
explicit historical interactions of music and poetry in the troubadour repertory or the Renaissance madrigal, "contemporary critical
theory" may not be nearly as important as the critical theory and
creative practice of those earlier eras themselves. But as John Neubauer
suggests, "genuinely successful interdisciplinary studies of a
'margin' will have to convince the scholars at the center that
questions at the margin are actually central to their field" (p.
3). By adopting the protective coloration of a now-dominant theoretical
discourse, these authors evidently hope to seem mainstream, central,
"with it." For those coming from departments of literature,
such a hope is entirely understandable, since most literary scholars
still regard books or articles containing music notation as marginal,
despite the irrefutable fact that the histories of music and poetry are
intertwined. Marshall Brown, for example, describes music as
"written in a script that is arduous to learn" (p. 75).
Arduous by comparison to what? Greek? Sanskrit? I would argue that our
common staff notation, in its precision, economy, and simplicity, is one
of the great semiotic achievements of Western culture, and I would urge
those seeking advanced degrees in literature to learn it. Musicologists,
though frequently described in this volume as resistive to
interdisciplinary ideas, are remarkably cheerful about learning
languages, and actually far more interested in textual matters than they
were twenty or thirty years ago. "Contemporary critical
theory," though often effectively deployed in these essays, is not
the only telephone exchange for interdisciplinary discourse.
Reception theory, evidently applicable to both literature and
music, proves fruitful for several authors. Charles Hamm explains how
Lionel Richie, in a song called "All Night Long (All Night),"
"deliberately created a generic piece, constructing it in such a
way as to make it accessible to audiences of various cultural
backgrounds, while at the same packing it with details allowing it to be
culture-specific at different moments of reception" (p. 37). In one
striking moment of reception, South Africans heard in this song a
political message Richie may not consciously have intended. Peter
Rabinowitz addresses similar issues more generally, drawing amusing and
instructive examples from popular guides to classical music, which
reveal the essential incompatibility of two common accounts of
sonata-allegro form, one emphasizing thematic complications, the other
emphasizing a conflict between keys. Although these rival accounts
"posit two different 'coherences' for a given moment ...
they have seemed (to different listeners, at least) equally satisfactory
ways of mapping out the terrain of sonata form" (pp. 51--52). As
Rabinowitz concludes, "part of 'the music,' as the
composer originally intended it, lies in the commonplaces and metaphors
listeners were likely to use to organize their aesthetic
experiences" (p. 55).
If this is true of sonata form, it must be true a fortiori of such
literary constructs as "the lyrical mode," which Paul Alpers
discusses in the least ambitious essay in the collection. Modestly
declaring that he "will not try to say anything about the musical
term 'mode'" (p. 59), Alpers misses the chance to
consider how the literary use of the term, however vague it may be,
relates to the long history of the claim that various musical modes
(harmoniai in the ancient Greek world) excite or represent various
emotions. Marshall Brown, who is much more comfortable with comparisons,
has some useful observations on the polarities that order
nineteenth-century novels and symphonies, and their dissolution in the
early twentieth century, when "literature was striving toward the
condition of music, just as music was striving toward the condition of
language, and these apparently opposite strivings arose out of a single
impulse, to substitute embodiment for denotation in order to restore
expressivity where formal control had been lost" (p. 85).
The search for an appropriate language in which to discuss
instrumental music, posed by Eduard Hanslick as a choice between
"dry technical designations" and "poetic fictions,"
is a problem acknowledged in many of these essays. Thomas Grey, who
quotes those phrases from Hanslick (p. 93), provides a critical taxonomy
of the leading metaphors in nineteenth-century music criticism. Although
it is easy to smile at the elaborate narrative "programs"
provided for the Beethoven symphonies by writers convinced that these
works must tell stories, Grey reminds us that the best of these
narratives rest on perceptive insights into the structure of the music.
Anthony Newcomb mines the same vein in a discussion of "narrative
archetypes" in Gustav Mahler's Ninth Symphony, enlisting
Tzvetan Todorov, Paul Ricoeur, and Peter Brooks in support of an analogy
between the form of that symphony and the "spiral quest" plot
of the nineteenth-century Bildungsroman. In an essay rich in local
insights, Newcomb shuttles back and forth between the technical and the
metaphorical. Discussing the fourth movement, for example, he identifies
as "striking instances of the yearning toward D ... the two
climactic moments ... when the D--F#--A--B pitches fundamental to the
first movement's diatonic-pentatonic D major hang for long periods
suspended in acute tension high in the texture, [only to] sink back into
the key of Db" (p. 131). Although the emotive force of the word
"yearning" may save it from being "dry," this kind
of analysis is certainly "technical," and carries with it all
the advantages of verifiability that we associate with that mode: we may
check our scores in order to confirm Newcomb's observations. His
next paragraph, however, invokes Friedrich von Schiller's notion
that the artist's task is to lead us "who no longer can return
to Arcadia, forward to Elysium," on the way to a conclusion that is
certainly a "poetic fiction": "Although one may long for
the primary, diatonic D major innocence of the opening of the symphony,
one can only recover it tarnished by chromaticism and in the darker,
perhaps richer hues of Db" (p. 132). In order to confirm this
conclusion, we need to accept the claim that one key is more
"innocent" than another, or at least to locate the notion that
keys had emotional characters among the "commonplaces and metaphors
listeners were likely to use to organize their aesthetic
experiences" (Rabinowitz, p. 55).
I do not mean to criticize Newcomb, whose account of Mahler I find
quite persuasive; my point is that the problem Hanslick identified is
still with us: in discourse about music, a middle ground between
verifiable technical observations and impressionistic metaphorical
claims remains elusive. Lawrence Kramer, who discusses
"representation" in the famous opening section of Haydn's
Creation, the "Vorstellung des Chaos," displays wonderful
skill in crafting convincing Schenkerian diagrams of the strange
harmonic motion of the piece, in placing Haydn's programmatic
gestures within a historical context controlled by John Milton, Johannes
Kepler, Isaac Newton, and the long Pythagorean tradition, and in
demonstrating how Haydn's contemporaries heard the piece with
apposite quotations from poems in its praise. Nonetheless, he must at
times simply appeal to the reader to accept his interpretation:
Here a solo flute emerges pianissimo high
above sustained string harmonies and
slowly descends by step to the cadence
(mm. 55--58). I do not think it is fanciful
to hear this phrase as a representation of
the descent of the unvoiced Word "[f]ar
into Chaos and the world unborn" (Mil-
ton, Paradise Lost, VII.220). (P. 148) Every detail in the first
sentence can be verified in the score: instrumentation, dynamic marking,
tempo, melodic line. But as Kramer's apologetic rhetoric signals,
none of the claims in the second sentence can be verified: there will
surely be readers who do think that hearing this phrase as a
representation of a specific line in Milton is "fanciful."
Such readers will also resist the closing generalizations of this essay:
Music becomes representational not in
direct relation to social or physical reality
but in relation to tropes. A musical like-
ness is the equivalent of a metaphor, and
more particularly of a metaphor with a
substantial intertextual history. Once
incorporated into a composition, such a
metaphor is capable of influencing mu-
sical processes, which are in turn capable
of extending, complicating, or revising
the metaphor. Thanks to this reciprocal
semiotic pressure, musical representa-
tion enables significant acts of interpre-
tation that can respond to the formalist's
rhetorical question, "What can one say?"
with real answers. (Pp. 161--62) A reader not prepared to accept
the identification of the descending flute line with the Miltonic phrase
might justly complain that "fanciful" or personal
interpretations are not "real answers." Although Kramer's
essay is one of the most serious contributions to this volume, both in
its specific insight into Haydn and in its general contemplation of the
problem of musical representation, its rhetoric is finally one of
persuasion rather than proof.
As scholars have long recognized, claims about meaning in music
operate differently when the music in question has a text, and the next
five essays all deal with texted music. David Lewin uses the harmonic
motion in one scene of Mozart's Le nozze di Figaro as a key to
character psychology. Edward T. Cone qualifies and refines his own
influential work on lieder in The Composer's Voice (Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1974), arguing that we should treat
"the protagonist [of a song] as the conscious composer of words and
music alike" (p. 179). Claudia Stanger applies concepts derived
from structuralism and semiotics to a song cycle by John Harbison,
plotting some of the compositional elements of Harbison's music
onto a "semiotic square" derived from A. J. Greimas. Ruth A.
Solie, in a spirited and challenging feminist analysis, describes Robert
Schumann's Frauenliebe as "the impersonation of a woman by the
voices of male culture, a spurious autoibiographical act" (p. 220).
Ellen Rosand gives a richly illustrated account of the representation of
madness in opera. Different readers will respond differently to these
essays (I found those of Cone and Solie the most stimulating), but
everyone should recognize that these writers can appeal to a kind of
evidence not available to Newcomb or Kramer. The sung text, even when it
is confused, inaudible, or ironic, provides significant information
about the composer's intended meaning; analysis in such cases,
though inevitably subjective, involves less guesswork than analysis of
untexted gestures in instrumental music.
This volume comes equipped with its own review, in the form of a
sophisticated "Commentary" by Hayden White, who is especially
concerned to make explicit the methodological assumptions that some of
the authors leave implicit. White's conclusions, made from within
the world of modern theory, closely resembles the one I would urge from
outside that world:
The very effort to import literary theory
into musicology implies fundamental dif-
ferences between literature and music. It
is unlikely that any set of critical or the-
oretical principles devised to deal prima-
rily with verbal discourse can effectively
address the principal problems of mu-
sical criticism and theory. What literary
theory and criticism can contribute to
musicology and music criticism is insight
into the nature of discourse in general.
It would follow that musicology could
profit from this exchange only insofar as
music could be considered as a form or
mode of discourse. And in that case the
exchange would run both ways, for if
music were a form or mode of discourse,
then literary theory would have as much
to learn from musicology as music crit-
icism has to learn from literary studies.
(Pp. 318--19)
For the most part, the authors in this important collection,
whether trained as literary scholars or as musicologists, are concerned
to explore the consequences of "import[ing] literary theory into
musicology." The next phase of the interdisciplinary dialogue that
has grown between these fields must be the exploration of what literary
studies have to learn from music.