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Methods of analysis in musicology

Methods of analysis in musicology
Methods of analysis in musicology
Nicolas Ruwet's 'Methods' deserve a broader reception than they have so far been afforded. When they appeared in 1966, they represented the first coherent attempt to articulate a music-analytical system which drew on the distributional and taxonomic procedures of anthropology, linguistics and ethnomusicology; they also form a large part of a system which has generated much critical comment, especially in the French and French-Canadian musico-semiotic worlds,1* in its twenty years' existence; furthermore, they constitute one of the few sets of analytical methodologies which initially address repertories other than those of the 'common practice' era. The concentration in 'Methods' on monodies from the twelfth to the fourteenth centuries makes their exclusion from contemporary discussions of the 'analysis of early music', with its all-too- often duplicative obsession with voice-leading procedures,2 all the more regrettable.
ruwet, everist, analysis
1468-2249
3-36
Ruwet, Nicolas
5fdcc374-7e30-4e11-81c9-fcadb70c59f5
Everist, Mark
54ab6966-73b4-4c0e-b218-80b2927eaeb0
Ruwet, Nicolas
5fdcc374-7e30-4e11-81c9-fcadb70c59f5
Everist, Mark
54ab6966-73b4-4c0e-b218-80b2927eaeb0

Ruwet, Nicolas and Everist, Mark (1987) Methods of analysis in musicology. Music Analysis, 6 (1/2), 3-36.

Record type: Article

Abstract

Nicolas Ruwet's 'Methods' deserve a broader reception than they have so far been afforded. When they appeared in 1966, they represented the first coherent attempt to articulate a music-analytical system which drew on the distributional and taxonomic procedures of anthropology, linguistics and ethnomusicology; they also form a large part of a system which has generated much critical comment, especially in the French and French-Canadian musico-semiotic worlds,1* in its twenty years' existence; furthermore, they constitute one of the few sets of analytical methodologies which initially address repertories other than those of the 'common practice' era. The concentration in 'Methods' on monodies from the twelfth to the fourteenth centuries makes their exclusion from contemporary discussions of the 'analysis of early music', with its all-too- often duplicative obsession with voice-leading procedures,2 all the more regrettable.

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More information

Published date: March 1987
Keywords: ruwet, everist, analysis

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 67480
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/67480
ISSN: 1468-2249
PURE UUID: 20057a65-44a0-4a18-93bd-c34d63398b54

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Date deposited: 03 Sep 2009
Last modified: 10 Dec 2021 16:16

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Contributors

Author: Nicolas Ruwet
Author: Mark Everist

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