Dimensions
125 x 178 x 25mm
The word "music" in the early 21st century means many things. It means Mozart in the elevator, 50s pop songs on TV adverts, Finnish folk songs on Nokia phones. It means inflammatory Serbian nationalist songs, ancient Coptic Church chants, Berlin electronica, Wynton Marsalis. It means Bach cantatas performed in Japan, Algerian rai in Madison Square Garden, it means Gilbert and Sullivan performed in Texas, it means Mongolian rap.
Given this bewildering abundance, how can we speak of a single thing called "music"? Here, Hewett argues that we can. More than that, he argues that a vast area of cultural practice is at risk of vanishing behind the deafening roar of all those dead simulations of music that fill the airwaves.
This sounds like a paradox; how could "music" be in danger, indeed actually disappear, while the world drowns in musical sounds? The reason is that music is not just "out there" in the sounds - it is also in us. It is a relation between sounds and those who hear them - and also those who make them. What makes that relation so precious to us is that it lifts us into a different realm, even as it roots us firmly in the here and now.
In this passionately argued and convincing book Ivan Hewett re-claims the unique place music should have in our culture in its own right.