Friday, October 17, 2008

Time thickening

On Sunday I went to a Coffee Concert by John Myewrscough (cello) and Lara Dodds-Eden (piano). They played various compositions among which the mind-blowing Cello Sonata n° 1 by Alfred Schnittke (1934-1998). Here I just want to talk about a thought that came to me during the concert.

The enjoyment of music increases with the ability to "grasp" with the mind a piece of melody as a whole -- at once. I mean as a unique entity rather than as a succession of individual notes (Husserl tried to explain the possibility of such a thing in his Vorlesungen zur Phänomenologie des inneren Zeitbewusstseins). The broader the perception of a fragment of music, the deeper the pleasure (think about Mozart who was able to restitute an entire concerto after hearing it only once...). So listening to music encourages the development of the ability to grasp longer periods of time instantaneously, i.e. to have them "present" interiorly as sensations.

This is how music enriches our existences : by teaching us how to thicken our present time.

(The cellist's name contains the name "Myers", so I'll call that the timelike Myers effect ; )

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