Music Theory
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Music theory concerns the inner knowledge of music and the abstract basis of music. In this sense, music theory concerns the ego, the intellect – feeling and understanding – the mind, and the sense of hearing.
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“Art is a mediator of the unspeakable.” Goethe |
Furthermore, music theory concerns the music-creating and music-cognizing self-consciousness, the musical empathy for musical truth and the integrated understanding of musical structures, the music-creating mechanics of the mind and the auditory mechanism of the sense of hearing.
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Well-Founded Music Theory |
Music theory concerns only marginally the artistic-acoustical practice of music performance.
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The Outer Edge of Music Theory |
Therefore, the insights presented in this book require a change of thinking as far as true music theory is concerned. We will regard conventional music theory at best as a specific part of a very “specific music theory,” and we will understand the knowledge of music revealed in this book as the basis of a “general music theory.”
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Re-Thinking in Conventional Music Theory |
Specific music theory is then, according to this book, general music theory realized in the acoustic space; and it concerns the integrated process of music production, to the technical realization of Dynamic Space Stereophony.
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General and Specific Music Theory |
And general music theory is concerned with the preceding, actual process of creating music up to the completion of the pure creative achievement – the musical product on the level of the mind.
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General Music Theory |
General music theory then ends where the composer knows what he wants to write down and where the interpreter knows what he will play.
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The Finished, Inner Sound of the Composition |
And specific music theory begins with writing down the score, and with the outer performance.
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Specific Music Theory |