
Listen
Description
Alles über E-Books | Antworten auf Fragen rund um E-Books, Kopierschutz und Dateiformate finden Sie in unserem Info- & Hilfebereich.
Along the way, he examines the evolution of copyright laws as applied to musical works and takes us into the courtroom to examine different debates on what we are and aren't allowed to listen to, and to witness the fine line between musical borrowing and outright plagiarism. Finally, he examines the recent phenomenon of DJs and digital compilations, and wonders how technology has affected our habits of listening and has changed listening from a passive exercise to an active one, whereby one can jump from track to track or play only selected pieces.
Reviews / Votes
Swerving away from the grand abstractions of late-deconstructive theory, the book has no labyrinthine close-readings, no world-historical announcements, and ties itself in no tortured linguistic knots. * -Current Musicology * Szendy's meditation on listening and on music is a dreamlike mixture of philosophy, personal memoir, and intellectual history. Listening is not hearing (perception or sensation), but neither is it understanding ("entendre"), as opera especially makes clear, in those ecstatic moments when the libretto is least important, and the human voice suspends all sense, but holds the listener most. What subject is brought into being in such moments, beyond the interiority of the person, as a relation to the world and to others with whom one shares (or disputes about) this experience? And how has the history and transmission of such listening, especially in music, been caught in the great questions of law and copyright, citation, quotation, reproduction and sampling, original text and its "translation" in performance (a secondary repetition without which music cannot exist)? How are the questions of instrumentation and mechanical reproduction, so dear to Walter Benjamin, Theodore Adorno and other theorists of modernity, played out in the economy of the listening ear? And how are these issues aggravated today by advertizing and media that sample and distribute, but also copyright and turn into property even those random noises -- the sound of a car engine or the tone of a cell phone -- which become the identifying markers or signatures of multinational corporations, where the border between music and noise is negotiated. From Lizst and Beethoven to Schoenberg and Stravinsky, from Charlie Parker and Bill Evans to more recent experiments in digital sampling, Szendy takes us across a wide territory with an ease and lightness that are beautifully rendered in Charlotte Mandell's translation. -- -Charles Shepherdson * University at Albany, State University of New York * Every child knows about the right to speak, and when to shut up and listen. But do we know what listening is? In this book Peter Szendy asks who has the right to listen when it comes to music. It turns out that listening is a species of theft disguised under polite terms like transcription and arrangement, but it is mischief all the same. There may be no such thing as a work of music. Szendy gives us a rogue's history of the ear, filled with splendid and hilarious anecdotes about the things we do to music, and the uncanny machines we have used on it, tin ears among them. Read this book and find out what you have an ear for. -- -Gerald Bruns * University of Notre Dame *More details
Other editions
Additional editions



Persons
Content
- Intro
- Contents
- Foreword: Ascoltando
- Prelude and Address: ''I'm Listening''
- Chapter 1 Author's Rights, Listener's Rights (Journal of Our Ancestors)
- Plagiarism and the obligation of truth
- 1757: Music and notes (at the foot of the page)
- 1835: A great change in our customs
- 1853: A listener in court
- 1841: Our portrait in a cartoon
- Chapter 2 Writing Our Listenings: Arrangement, Translation, Criticism
- Ever since there have been works...
- Functions of arrangement
- Liszt and the translators
- The original in suspense
- Arrangement at work (Liszt, second version)
- Schumann the critic
- Decline of arrangement (Why is music so hard to understand?)
- Chapter 3 Our Instruments for Listening Before the Law (Second Journal Entry)
- The First trial of mechanical music (Verdi on the boards)
- Music in Braille
- The phonograph in court
- Rights for reproduction and radio broadcast
- Stravinsky, Schoenberg, and pirates
- The Furtwängler ruling and subsidiary laws
- Trademarking a sound (Harley-Davidson in the sonic landscape)
- On the right to quotation in music (John Oswald, the listener)
- Chapter 4 Listening (to Listening): The Making of the Modern Ear
- Types of listening (Adorno's Diagnosis)
- ''Listening, I follow you'' (Don Giovanni)
- Polemology of listening (Berlioz and the art of the claque)
- Ludwig van (1): attention
- Ludwig van (2): deafness
- Schoenberg: ''to hear everything''
- Epilogue: Plastic Listening
- Ludwig van (3): A dialogue with Beethoven
- Ludwig van (4): The ''second practice'' of track markers
- Ludwig van (5): The prostheses of authenticity
- Hearing listening: summation of listening(s)
- Notes
System requirements
File format: PDF
Copy-Protection: Adobe-DRM (Digital Rights Management)
System requirements:
- Computer (Windows; MacOS X; Linux): Install the free reader Adobe Digital Editions prior to download (see eBook Help).
- Tablet/smartphone (Android; iOS): Install the free app Adobe Digital Editions or the app PocketBook before downloading (see eBook Help).
- E-reader: Bookeen, Kobo, Pocketbook, Sony, Tolino and many more (only limited: Kindle).
The file format PDF always displays a book page identically on any hardware. This makes PDF suitable for complex layouts such as those used in textbooks and reference books (images, tables, columns, footnotes). Unfortunately, on the small screens of e-readers or smartphones, PDFs are rather annoying, requiring too much scrolling.
This eBook uses Adobe-DRM, a „hard” copy protection. If the necessary requirements are not met, unfortunately you will not be able to open the eBook. You will therefore need to prepare your reading hardware before downloading.
Please note: We strongly recommend that you authorise using your personal Adobe ID after installation of any reading software.
For more information, see our eBook Help page.