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E-raamat: Teaching Performance: A Philosophy of Piano Pedagogy

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How can the studio teacher teach a lesson so as to instill refined artistic sensibilities, ones often thought to elude language? How can the applied lesson be a form of aesthetic education? How can teaching performance be an artistic endeavor in its own right? These are some of the questions Teaching Performance attempts to answer, drawing on the author's several decades of experience as a studio teacher and music scholar.

The architects of absolute music (Hanslick, Schopenhauer, and others) held that it is precisely because instrumental music lacks language and thus any overt connection to the non-musical world that it is able to expose essential elements of that world. More particularly, for these philosophers, it is the density of musical structure—the intricate interplay among purely musical elements—that allows music to capture the essences behind appearances. By analogy, the author contends that the more structurally intricate and aesthetically nuanced a pedagogical system is, the greater its ability to illuminate music and facilitate musical skills. The author terms this phenomenonrelational autonomy. Eight chapters unfold a piano-pedagogical system pivoting on the principle of relational autonomy. In grounding piano pedagogy in the aesthetics of absolute music, each domain works on the other. On the one hand, Romantic aesthetics affords pedagogy a source of artistic value in its own right. On the other hand, pedagogy concretizes Romantic aesthetics, deflating its transcendental pretentions and showing the dichotomy of absolute/utilitarian to be specious.

1 Introduction
1(22)
1.1 Two Dilemmas
1(7)
1.1.1 The Music/Language Divide
1(6)
1.1.2 Utilitarian Pedagogy
7(1)
1.2 Pedagogical Structure
8(5)
1.2.1 Background
9(3)
1.2.2 Middleground
12(1)
1.2.3 Foreground
12(1)
1.2.4 Relationship Among Levels
13(1)
1.3 Overview and Aims
13(2)
1.4 Anticipating Concerns
15(8)
References
18(5)
Part I Aesthetic Ideology
2 Musical Autonomy and Musical Meaning: A Historical Overview
23(30)
2.1 Two Eighteenth-Century Perspectives
25(6)
2.1.1 Music as Mimesis
25(2)
2.1.2 Music and Reflective Judgment
27(4)
2.2 Aesthetics as Ideology
31(2)
2.3 The Concept of Absolute Music
33(4)
2.4 Musical Manifestations of the Absolute
37(7)
2.4.1 The Work Concept
37(1)
2.4.2 Text-Based Music
38(3)
2.4.3 Autonomy of Musical Parameters
41(3)
2.5 Adorno's View of Musical Autonomy
44(9)
2.5.1 An Example
46(3)
Conclusion
49(1)
References
50(3)
3 The Performer's Role
53(34)
3.1 Critique
54(9)
3.1.1 Authenticity
54(4)
3.1.2 Ontologies of the Musical Work
58(5)
3.2 Adorno's Theory of "Musical Reproduction"
63(7)
3.2.1 The Historicity of the Work
65(4)
3.2.2 Subjectivity in Interpretation
69(1)
3.3 Interpretive Ramifications
70(17)
3.3.1 Critique
70(7)
3.3.2 A Preferred Interpretive Model
77(1)
3.3.3 Conclusion: The Autonomous Interpreter
78(3)
References
81(6)
Part II Methodology
4 The Parameters of Performance
87(38)
4.1 Introduction
87(4)
4.2 A Parametric Structure
91(14)
4.2.1 Technique
92(1)
4.2.2 Interpretation
93(7)
4.2.3 Expression
100(2)
4.2.4 Relations Among Parameters
102(3)
4.3 Toward a Diachronic Method
105(3)
4.4 An Example
108(10)
4.4.1 Analysis
109(5)
4.4.2 Interpretation
114(2)
4.4.3 Expression
116(2)
4.5 Relation to Higher Levels
118(7)
References
121(4)
5 Fingering: Historical Versus Modern Approaches
125(30)
5.1 Historical Fingering
126(9)
5.1.1 C.P.E. Bach
126(2)
5.1.2 Beethoven
128(3)
5.1.3 Chopin
131(2)
5.1.4 Schenker
133(2)
5.2 Modern Fingering
135(5)
5.3 Fingering and Aesthetic Ideologies
140(10)
5.3.1 Historical Fingering
140(7)
5.3.2 Modern Fingering
147(3)
5.4 Relation to Higher Levels
150(5)
References
151(1)
Editions
152(3)
Part III Praxis
6 Music Reading: An Essentialist Approach
155(18)
6.1 The Curriculum
157(7)
6.1.1 First Module: Positioning
157(1)
6.1.2 Second Module: Playing Melodies
158(2)
6.1.3 Third Module: Counterpoint and Harmony
160(4)
6.2 Relation to Higher Levels
164(9)
6.2.1 Schenker
165(4)
6.2.2 Schoenberg
169(2)
Conclusion
171(1)
References
172(1)
7 The Lesson as an Aesthetic Experience
173(38)
7.1 Dewey and Aesthetic Experience
174(2)
7.2 Aesthetic Attributes
176(14)
7.2.1 Unity
176(2)
7.2.2 Form
178(3)
7.2.3 Phrasing
181(1)
7.2.4 Internality
182(3)
7.2.5 Necessity
185(1)
7.2.6 Opposition
186(1)
7.2.7 Non-Conceptuality
187(1)
7.2.8 Unconventionally
188(2)
7.3 Lessons
190(21)
7.3.1 Maya
191(2)
7.3.2 Sean
193(3)
7.3.3 Marissa
196(2)
7.3.4 Darren
198(5)
Conclusion
203(6)
References
209(2)
8 Conclusion: Pedagogy as Art
211(16)
8.1 Additional Examples
211(2)
8.2 Syntheses
213(3)
8.3 Politics of Pedagogy
216(5)
8.4 Transformation
221(6)
References
224(3)
Index 9