Making Musicians Think: The Problem with Organs
Publication date
2020
Authors
Fidom, Hans
Editors
Dupré, Sven
Harris, Anna
Kursell, Julia
Lulof, Patricia
Stols-Witlox, Maartje
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Part of book
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Abstract
Discussions regarding reconstruction, replication, or re-enactment in music can be fruitful only if musicians are experts in understanding the quality of the material with which they make their music: sounds. Such expertise can be acquired by analyzing and adapting the ways organists and organ builders deal with organ sounds, as each organ is an individual to a far greater extent than any other musical instrument. Organ builders discern how the thousands of pipes in an organ should sound and cooperate; organists have to able to understand the frames thus set. Generally speaking, it follows that composers’ intentions are subordinate to musicians’ and listeners’ ones: music is something that sounds.
Keywords
organs, sound, situationality, voicing, music-making, listening, intentionality
Citation
Fidom, H 2020, Making Musicians Think: The Problem with Organs. in S Dupré, A Harris, J Kursell, P Lulof & M Stols-Witlox (eds), Reconstruction, Replication and Re-enactment in the Humanities and Social Sciences. Amsterdam University Press, pp. 91-114. https://doi.org/10.1515/9789048543854-005