The Ontology of the Work: Exploring the Creative Discourse

Roger Redgate

Abstract


How do we understand the ontology of a work from its initial inception in the mind of a composer, to the final realisation in performance? This creative discourse is often more complex than at first appears. What is the nature of the unformed material; is this a specific apprehension of sound, an image or an extra musical reference? To what degree is this material then mediated by its own possibility in notation or even determined by various structural processes? Further, what are the relationships obtaining between notation and interpretation seen as potential form building elements; are there structures inherent in notation, which elicit material beyond a simple representation and if so, how might a composer exploit this as part of the work structure?

This paper will examine the nature of the creative discourse in relation to my own compositional practice, which focuses on the symbiotic relationship between complex pre-compositional processes, notational potential and a more intuitive scanning of the material.

Keywords: Adorno, audiation, creative discourse, compositional processes, complex systems, intuition, notation, material, musique informelle, structure, Webern

For citation: Redgate R. The Ontology of the Work: Exploring the Creative Discourse [Electronic source]. In: Sovremennye problemy muzykoznaniya / Contemporary Musicology, 2019, no. 2, pp.43–59. DOI: 10.56620/2587-9731-2019-2-043-059


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References


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DOI: https://doi.org/10.56620/2587-9731-2019-2-043-059

Copyright (c) 2019 Roger Redgate

License URL: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/