19. Catharsis: The Listener’s Reward
Tragedy, then, is an imitation of an action that is serious, complete, and of a certain magnitude; in language embellished with each kind of artistic ornament, ...
Tragedy, then, is an imitation of an action that is serious, complete, and of a certain magnitude; in language embellished with each kind of artistic ornament, ...
I began my school days in Hutchinson, Kansas. During my first year in school someone told the class how lucky we were to live in Hutchinson, because it is in th...
A very familiar expression is, “Music is the International Language.” As this is used today it expresses the fact that the emotions communicated by Music are un...
Mersenne Napoleon: Music of all the arts has the most influence on the passions and the legislator should give it the greatest encouragement. R. W. Marpurg, 174...
Descartes, Kircher, Mattheson and Heinichen Napoleon: Music of all the arts has the most influence on the passions and the legislator should give it the greates...
Martin Luther (1538): Only Music deserves being extolled as the mistress and governess of the feelings of the human heart. Angelo Berardi (1681): Music is the r...
Many early histories of Baroque music had a focus which left out a great deal of music, in particular the music representing Humanism, By Humanism in music we m...
In works of music that man who judges by rules, judges wrong. Voltaire The fragments of Greek philosophy which have survived from the period before Socrates and...
The work of getting anybody to cheerfully undertake the monotony and drudgery of teaching must be effected not by pay merely, but by a skillfully worked-up appe...
Although traditional Music History texts generally fail to make this clear, beginning with the late Renaissance there was a rapidly growing interest in leaving ...