Scoring the Unknown: Rethinking Fixity and Openness in Western Art Music Notation
Skip to main content
eScholarship
Open Access Publications from the University of California

UC Irvine

UC Irvine Electronic Theses and Dissertations bannerUC Irvine

Scoring the Unknown: Rethinking Fixity and Openness in Western Art Music Notation

Creative Commons 'BY' version 4.0 license
Abstract

To date, there exists a startling lack of scholarly literature which attempts to systematically address novel notations for improvisers—particularly instances centering syntactically- and semantically- well-defined symbols. This lack of attention may be attributed, at least partially, to unclear definitions at the heart of the discourse and the lack of a rigorous typology of music notations generally. This dissertation, via a multi-pronged strategy, takes steps toward filling this lacuna. Chapter One provides a historical gloss grounding twentieth- and twenty-first century performer/notation interaction in much earlier models, locating Western notation’s fixity and openness as core sites of musico-technological innovation. In the process, the chapter highlights pivotal signposts in Western notation which mark important paradigm shifts in these conceptual categories. Chapter Two articulates a clear philosophical position with regard to notational semantic content, “fixed” and “open” notation, and thenotion of the open score as first posed in the 1950s and ’60s, challenging the conceits of the prevailing “folk semiosis” of music notation in order to begin developing a more analytically useful notation typology. To this end, the chapter examines essays by Umberto Eco and Pierre Boulez, along with György Ligeti’s „Neue Notation: Kommunikationsmittel oder Selbstzweck?”—by far the most lucid attempt to formulate such a typology. Chapter Three deploys concepts solidified in the previous chapter in service of a notation-centric analysis of two late-century work complexes: Anthony Braxton’s Composition No. 76 and Horațiu Rădulescu’s Das Andere/Op. 89 (“Before the Universe was Born”). Interrogating these works’ related-but-disparate notation schemes grants new insights into notation’s ability to mediate performer/composer agencies and to uniquely reflect composers’ communities of practice and philosophical/aesthetic commitments. Finally, Chapter Four thoroughly documents the author’s efforts to develop and deploy a novel notation scheme for improvising musicians. This includes a discussion of several aspects of the design and preliminary implementation of {O-G} notation as well as of its use in a series of creative works intended to demonstrate its range and flexibility. This is followed by a frank assessment of the extent to which it was capable of fulfilling the author’s initial desiderata and subsequent design criteria.

Main Content
For improved accessibility of PDF content, download the file to your device.
Current View