Compare Desire in Chromatic Harmony by Kenneth Smith, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters
Kenneth Smith
$54.95
How does music engage us in relations of desire? Where does this desire come from? Author Kenneth Smith seeks to answer these questions, starting with Wagner, whose Tristan und Isolde drew on Schopenhauer's theory that life is a never-ending struggle to rid ourselves of desire. Analyzingcanonical and non-canonical Western works that are both harmonically enriched and psychologically complex, Desire in Chromatic Harmony yields a new theory of how chromatic chord progressions direct the listener on intricate journeys through harmonic space, mirroring the tensions of the psyche foundin Schopenhauer, Freud, Lacan, Lyotard, and Deleuze. Smith extends this mode of enquiry into the twentieth century landscape, and into sophisticated music theory. Exploring philosophically engaged European American composers such as Richard Strauss, Alexander Skryabin, Josef Suk, Charles Ives, andAaron Copland, Smith focuses on harmony and chord progression and drills down into the diatonic undercurrent beneath densely chromatic and dissonant surfaces. From the obsession with death and mourning in Suk's Asrael Symphony to an exploration of "perversion" in Strauss's Elektra; from the Sufimysticism of Szymanowski's Song of the Night to the failed fantasy of the American dream in Copland's The Tender Land, Desire in Chromatic Harmony cuts a path through the dense forests of chromatic complexity, revealing the psychological make-up of post-Wagnerian psychodynamic music. | Desire in Chromatic Harmony by Kenneth Smith, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters