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ISBN: HB: 9780226626925

University of Chicago Press

May 2019

368 pp.

22.8x15.2 cm

76 halftones

HB:
£42,00
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Stories of Tonality in the Age of Francois-Joseph Fetis

"Stories of Tonality in the Age of Francois-Joseph Fetis" explores the concept of musical tonality through the writings of the Belgian musicologist Francois-Joseph Fetis (1784-1867), who was singularly responsible for theorizing and popularizing the term in the nineteenth century. Thomas Christensen weaves a rich story in which tonality emerges as a theoretical construct born of anxiety and alterity for Europeans during this time as they learned more about "other" musics and alternative tonal systems. Tonality became a central vortex in which French musicians thought – and argued – about a variety of musical repertoires, be they contemporary European musics of the stage, concert hall, or church, folk songs from the provinces, microtonal scale systems of Arabic and Indian music, or the medieval and Renaissance music whose notational traces were just beginning to be deciphered by scholars. Fetis's influential writings offer insight into how tonality ingrained itself within nineteenth-century music discourse, and why it has continued to resonate with uncanny prescience throughout the musical upheavals of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.

About the Author

Thomas Christensen is the Avalon Foundation Professor of Music and the Humanities at the University of Chicago and editor of "The Cambridge History of Western Music Theory".