
Making Music Together
Analytical Perspectives on Musical Interaction
Oxford University Press Inc
Will be published approx. on 6. May 2026
Book
Hardback
440 pages
978-0-19-780605-0 (ISBN)
Description
Music is a complex creative process involving many individuals, from performers to improvisers to composers to listeners and beyond. Yet, music analysis has often focused on individual composers' processes, much to the exclusion of a myriad of other activities that occur during the music making process. Making Music Together offers an interactive turn for music analysis, one that acknowledges the deeply collaborative creativity at the center of all music making. This perspective, fresh and novel in its approach, affords a more inclusive and expansive view of music analysis. It enables an understanding of the numerous kinds of interactions that take place in music-making contexts: interactions between musicians, between performers and their instruments, between musicians and dancers, between musicians and machines, and much more. This book engages a diverse breadth of musical styles, including Western Euroclassical musics, collaborative improvisations in jazz and free genres, and a range of global music practices. With an emphasis on the vibrant interactivity at work in all aspects of music making, Making Music Together demonstrates how detailed music analysis can attend not only to sounds made, but to the human lives, experiences, and societies defined by it altogether.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
With dust jacket
Illustrations
3 tables, 79 music examples, and 37 b/w figures and images
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Thickness: 29 mm
Weight
803 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-780605-0 (9780197806050)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Garrett Michaelsen is an independent music theorist and trumpet player living in the San Francisco Bay Area. He has written on many topics surrounding improvisation in music. His work appears in numerous journals, including Critical Studies in Improvisation, Engaging Students, GAMUT, Music Analysis, and Music Theory Online, as well as in the edited volume Analyzing the Music of Living Composers (and Others). He has previously taught at University of Massachusetts Lowell, Indiana University, and Marin School of the Arts.
Chris Stover is a music theorist, composer, and improvising trombonist. His book Reimagining Music Theory: Contexts, Communities, Creativities was published by Routledge, and he is co-editor of Rancière and Music (Edinburgh University) as well as eight special journal issues. He is a Senior Lecturer in Music Studies and Research at Queensland Conservatorium, Griffith University, where he convenes the Higher Degree Research program.
Chris Stover is a music theorist, composer, and improvising trombonist. His book Reimagining Music Theory: Contexts, Communities, Creativities was published by Routledge, and he is co-editor of Rancière and Music (Edinburgh University) as well as eight special journal issues. He is a Senior Lecturer in Music Studies and Research at Queensland Conservatorium, Griffith University, where he convenes the Higher Degree Research program.
Editor
Independent ResearcherIndependent Researcher
Senior Lecturer in Music Studies and ResearchSenior Lecturer in Music Studies and Research, Queensland Conservatorium, Griffith University
Content
- Introduction
- Section 1: Embodied and Enacted Social Interaction
- 1: Mine Döantan-Dack: Aesthetics Meets the Performing Body: Re-thinking Rachmaninoff 's Second Piano Concerto
- 2: Edward Klorman: Analyzing Deception in Lieder and Opera
- 3: Garrett Michaelsen: Improvisation, Interaction, and Interpretation: Relational Dynamics in Duke Ellington's "Money Jungle"
- 4: Rebecca Simpson-Litke: Improvisatory Interactions Between Salsa Music and Dance
- 5: Sarah Town: Duologue: Fantasy, Time, and Travel in the Work of Pedrito Martínez and Alfredo Rodríguez
- Section 2: Communication and Representation of Interaction
- 6: Diljeet Kaur Bhachu, Alec Cooper, and Nikki Moran: Interaction in Indian Music: Connections and Critical Reflection
- 7: Marc E. Hannaford: Affordances and Free Improvisation: An Analytical Framework
- 8: Cayenna Ponchione-Bailey and Eric F. Clarke: Agency, Creativity and (Inter)action in Orchestral Performance
- 9: Michelle Yom: Listening (transcribing) as Improvisation (self analysis)
- Section 3: Posthuman and New Materialist Interaction
- 10: Chris Stover: Affect and Acquisitiveness in Musical Interaction
- 11: Ritwik Banerji: Silence in Free Improvisation
- 12: Marcel Cobussen: Music-A Field of Non-human Interaction
- 13: Roger T. Dean: The Uncertainty Principle in Musical Improvisation and Interaction
- 14: Matthew Goodheart: Bracken Tongues Wept: Reembodied Sound and Improvisation