Musical argument

Concept in music theory From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A musical argument is a means of creating tension through the relation of expressive content and musical form:

Traditional dialectal[a] music is representational: the musical form relates to an expressive content and is a means of creating a growing tension; this is what is usually called the musical argument.

Wim Mertens (1999)[1]

Experimental musical forms may use process or indeterminacy rather than argument.[2]

The musical argument may be characterized as the primary flow and current idea being presented in a piece:

The very definition of musical argument is something that keeps going, and you uncover new details and new combinations. A musical argument is not the same as a verbal argument. A verbal argument implies that there's [sic] two sides; a musical argument makes the two sides one thing, like counterpoint. A fugue is like that; a double fugue, at least, takes two different ideas and shows you how they relate, and it shows you how they're the same thing.

Phil Lesh (1982)[3]

Thus one may hear of a musical argument being interrupted, extended, or repeated.[original research?]

See also

Notes

  1. The purpose of the dialectic method of reasoning is resolution of disagreement through rational discussion between opposing viewpoints.

References

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