The work begins by asking the questions of how contemporary phenomenology is con-cerned with music, and how phenomenological descriptions of music and musical experi-ences are helpful in grasping the concreteness of these experiences. I then proceed with minor findings from phenomenological authorities, who seem to somehow need music to explain their phenomenology. From Maurice Merleau-Ponty to Jean-Luc Nancy and back to Edmund Husserl and Martin Heidegger, there are musical findings to be asserted. I pro-pose to look at phenomenological studies of the musical aspects of existence as they appear in various philosophical works bringing together different accounts of music and aesthetics and pointing towards phenomenological study as a methodology for everyday aesthetics. While there are many different areas of music phenomenology such as studies of sound and listening, studies in perception of musical works, in experience of artistic creation, in singing and playing musical instruments, and phenomenology of transcendent or religious horizons of the experience of music, it is most promising-I suggest-to look at phenom-enological studies of music from the perspective of everyday happenings and discoveries of musical aspects of life. Thus, I attempt to display the uses of phenomenology in finding musical aspects of everyday existence as well as in describing and illuminating the art of music. A look at Roman Ingarden's and Mikel Dufrenne's most intuitive and promising ideas will be broadened with a perspective from Don Ihde and Arnold Berleant.
CITATION STYLE
Szyszkowska, M. A. (2018). Musical phenomenology: Artistic traditions and everyday experience. Avant, 9(2), 141–155. https://doi.org/10.26913/avant.2018.02.09
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