Temporal Transformations In Cross-Cultural Perspective: Augmentation In Baroque, Carnatic And Balinese Music

To advance any cross-cultural musicology we could do worse than to refine our perspectives on temporality. Yet labeling qualities of musical time–as if such qualities were static–locks in counterproductive essentializations, since old categories like linear and nonlinear time emerged from obsolete d...

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Main Author: Tenzer, Michael
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Analytical Approaches to World Music 2011-07-01
Series:Analytical Approaches to World Music
Online Access:http://aawmjournal.com/articles/2011a/Tenzer_AAWM_Vol_1_1.pdf
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spelling doaj-9de48b0273314cf08361412576275f432020-11-25T03:38:43ZengAnalytical Approaches to World MusicAnalytical Approaches to World Music2158-52962011-07-0111152175Temporal Transformations In Cross-Cultural Perspective: Augmentation In Baroque, Carnatic And Balinese MusicTenzer, Michael0University of British ColumbiaTo advance any cross-cultural musicology we could do worse than to refine our perspectives on temporality. Yet labeling qualities of musical time–as if such qualities were static–locks in counterproductive essentializations, since old categories like linear and nonlinear time emerged from obsolete distinctions between the West and “the rest” and are based on misleading analogies to the physical world. Such polarized distinctions now seem insufficient. Indeed, any sense of stability in a temporal category is illusory, since even in musics of strict repetition, time and its perceivers are always moving. Thus it may be more productive to typologize temporal transformations, as a way to focus on unfolding process. This article begins to address the question of how many ways musical time can transform. Choosing the culturally and structurally weighted process of temporal augmentation as a case study, I focus on analysis and comparison of examples from Europe, South India and Indonesia. Explanations are sought for how a culturally informed listener perceives the unfolding of augmentation, and in so doing comes to reevaluate the sense of orientation in the music’s time.http://aawmjournal.com/articles/2011a/Tenzer_AAWM_Vol_1_1.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tenzer, Michael
spellingShingle Tenzer, Michael
Temporal Transformations In Cross-Cultural Perspective: Augmentation In Baroque, Carnatic And Balinese Music
Analytical Approaches to World Music
author_facet Tenzer, Michael
author_sort Tenzer, Michael
title Temporal Transformations In Cross-Cultural Perspective: Augmentation In Baroque, Carnatic And Balinese Music
title_short Temporal Transformations In Cross-Cultural Perspective: Augmentation In Baroque, Carnatic And Balinese Music
title_full Temporal Transformations In Cross-Cultural Perspective: Augmentation In Baroque, Carnatic And Balinese Music
title_fullStr Temporal Transformations In Cross-Cultural Perspective: Augmentation In Baroque, Carnatic And Balinese Music
title_full_unstemmed Temporal Transformations In Cross-Cultural Perspective: Augmentation In Baroque, Carnatic And Balinese Music
title_sort temporal transformations in cross-cultural perspective: augmentation in baroque, carnatic and balinese music
publisher Analytical Approaches to World Music
series Analytical Approaches to World Music
issn 2158-5296
publishDate 2011-07-01
description To advance any cross-cultural musicology we could do worse than to refine our perspectives on temporality. Yet labeling qualities of musical time–as if such qualities were static–locks in counterproductive essentializations, since old categories like linear and nonlinear time emerged from obsolete distinctions between the West and “the rest” and are based on misleading analogies to the physical world. Such polarized distinctions now seem insufficient. Indeed, any sense of stability in a temporal category is illusory, since even in musics of strict repetition, time and its perceivers are always moving. Thus it may be more productive to typologize temporal transformations, as a way to focus on unfolding process. This article begins to address the question of how many ways musical time can transform. Choosing the culturally and structurally weighted process of temporal augmentation as a case study, I focus on analysis and comparison of examples from Europe, South India and Indonesia. Explanations are sought for how a culturally informed listener perceives the unfolding of augmentation, and in so doing comes to reevaluate the sense of orientation in the music’s time.
url http://aawmjournal.com/articles/2011a/Tenzer_AAWM_Vol_1_1.pdf
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