Breaking the Sound Barrier
(an argument for mainstream literary music)
ARGUMENTS ABOUT
MUSICAL AESTHETICS often degenerate into "shouting
matches" that end in stalemate. In Breaking the Sound Barrier,
John Winsor clears the air by presenting evidence that some works
are, in fact, objectively better than others. This is a particularly
timely issue because a great deal of bad music is being performed
in American concert halls right now and a great deal of good music
isn't. If you believe that qualitative judgment in the arts is
purely subjective, this book should persuade you to rethink your
position. If, on the other hand, you think there is a genuine
qualitative difference between one musical work and another, this
book will provide you with relevant ammunition.
Winsor defines music, presents some empirical evidence from the
field of music psychology, relates that evidence to events in
Western music history, and explains what works and what doesn't,
and why. He demonstrates that from the advent of notation
to the present, music has, in fact, progressed and not merely
changed. He then exposes some major errors in modernist and postmodernist
writing that have disrupted music's progress and recommends remedial
action for restoring the mainstream literary tradition.
To buy Breaking the Sound Barrier online, click on one of the links below:
To order it offline from iUniverse, call 1-877-823-9235.
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