An important property of musical content is generalization or detail. The nature of the musical work


In modern psychological and pedagogical literature, the perception of music is considered as “the process of reflection, formation of a musical image in the mind of a person. At the heart of this process is an evaluative attitude to the perceived work.

There is another definition of musical perception: it is “a complex activity aimed at adequately reflecting music and combining the actual perception (perception) of musical material with the data of musical and general life experience (apperception), cognition, emotional experience and evaluation of the work”

Musical perception is a complex, mentally multi-component process. Anyone with simple physical hearing can tell where music is playing and where it's just the noise produced by various objects, machines and other objects. But not everyone can hear the reflection of the subtlest experiences in the sounds of music.

Besides, musical perception- the concept of historical, social, age. It is conditioned by a system of determinants: a piece of music, general historical, life, genre and communicative context, external and internal conditions of perception. It is also determined by age and gender. Musical perception is influenced by the style of the work, its genre. For example, the masses of Palestrina are listened to differently than the symphonies of Shostakovich or the songs of Solovyov-Sedov. Music is perceived differently in the historic Philharmonic Hall, in particular, in the hall of the Academic Chapel. M.I. Glinka or on the open stage of the park of culture and recreation. And it's not just the acoustic features of these concert venues, but also in the mood that the atmosphere, interior, etc., creates in the listener. Construction and decoration of a concert or theater halls is one of the most difficult tasks of architecture and applied art. Decoration concert halls flowers, paintings, sculptures, etc., has an unusually beneficial effect on musical perception.

To develop musical perception means to teach the listener to empathize with the feelings and moods expressed by the composer through the play of sounds organized in a special way. This means - to include the listener in the process of active co-creation and empathy with ideas and images expressed in the language of non-verbal communication; it also means an understanding of the means by which an artist-musician, composer, performer achieves a given aesthetic effect of influence. In addition to activity, musical perception is characterized by a number of qualities, in which its beneficial, developing influence on the human psyche, including mental abilities, is revealed.

Musical perception, like no other, is distinguished by vivid emotionality and imagery. It touches on various aspects. emotional sphere. Despite the abstractness of the musical language, the musical content is diverse and embossed in images. And the specificity of their perception lies not in the strict fixation of these images, but in their variability. The work of reproductive thinking is connected with musical perception and its inherent evaluative activity.

Speaking about the specifics of musical perception, it is necessary to understand the difference between hearing music, hearing music and perception music. Hearing music does not involve focusing attention only on it, listening already requires focusing attention on music, while perception is associated with comprehending the meaning of music and requires the inclusion of intellectual functions. Moreover, the more complex, larger-scale a piece of music, the more intense intellectual work it requires from a person when it is perceived. An intermediate stage between listening to music and its perception is comitate perception, a kind of “lightweight” perception, “half an ear”. It has been dominant for thousands of years.

The formation of a full-fledged musical perception testifies to the most complex multilateral interrelated process: firstly, the intellectual growth of a person, secondly, the improvement of all his basic musical abilities, thirdly, the high level of development of musical art, the apex of which was the appearance of the classical sonata and symphonies. It is the perception of such genres as symphony and sonata that requires the greatest intellectual tension and concentration of attention.

The development of music perception occurs in the process of all types of musical activity. For example, in order to learn a song, you must first listen to it; when performing a song, it is important to listen to the purity of the intonation of the melody, the expressiveness of its sound; moving to the music, we follow its rhythmic, dynamic, tempo change, development and convey our attitude to the work in motion.

In the process of perception of music, we can distinguish several stages:

The stage of the emergence of interest in the work to be heard, and the formation of an attitude towards its perception,

listening stage,

Stage of understanding and experience,

Interpretation and evaluation stage,

realizing that the division is conditional, since the sequence of stages can change, one period of perception can merge with another.

Analyzing the process of musical perception, we can present it in two planes of activity, inextricably bound friend with the other - perception as such and the idea of ​​music, i.e. holistic image of the work. Only multiple perception (repetition) of music allows a person to form a full-fledged holistic image of the work. In the process of multiple perception of music, there is a constant improvement of auditory actions, the degree of their coordination. At the first listening, the main task of perception is the approximate coverage of the entire musical plan of the work with the selection of individual fragments. In the process of repeated listening in the structure of musical activity, forecasting and anticipation based on previously formed ideas begin to appear. The listener compares what is sounding at a given moment of time with what was previously perceived, with his own associative range. Finally, in the process of subsequent perception on the basis of in-depth analysis through synthesis, a rational-logical assimilation of musical material takes place, a comprehensive comprehension and experience of its emotional meaning.

From the foregoing, it is clearly seen that musical perception is characterized by certain properties. Some of them are specific to musical perception (emotionality, imagery), while others are common to all types of perception (integrity, meaningfulness, selectivity).

Speaking about the perception of music, one cannot bypass such an integral part of it as emotionality. Aesthetic emotionality is understood as the experience of the beauty of the artistic image, feelings, thoughts awakened by music. The aesthetic perception of music is always emotional, it is unthinkable without emotions. At the same time, emotional perception may not be aesthetic. Listening to music, a person can simply “succumb” to its mood, “get infected” with it, simply rejoice or be sad, without thinking about its aesthetic content. Only gradually, as a result of purposeful activity to gain experience in communicating with music, having received certain knowledge, musical baggage, he will begin to highlight the aesthetic side of a musical work, to notice and realize the beauty and depth of sounding music.

Sometimes the aesthetic experience is so strong and vivid that a person experiences a feeling of great happiness. "This feeling - according to the definition of the composer D. Shostakovich - arises from the fact that in a person, under the influence of music, the dormant forces of the soul awaken until now and he cognizes them."

Another characteristic property of musical perception is integrity. A person perceives a piece of music, first of all, as a whole, but this is carried out on the basis of the perception of the expressiveness of individual elements of musical speech: melody, harmony, rhythm, timbre. The perceived musical image is a complex unity of various means musical expressiveness, creatively used by the composer to convey a certain artistic content. An artistic musical image is always perceived by a person as a whole, but with varying degrees of completeness and differentiation, depending on the level of development of each individual.

“The concept of the integrity of musical perception is not adequate to the concept of its completeness of differentiation. Naturally, an unprepared listener cannot adequately perceive the whole system of means that creates a musical image, as a professional musician is capable of doing. Nevertheless, he perceives in the work its holistic image - the mood, the nature of the work.

One of the most important (if not the most important) components of perception in general and musical perception in particular is meaningfulness. Psychologists say that perception is impossible without the participation of thinking, without awareness and understanding of what is perceived. V.N. Shatskaya writes that "under the main perception of a musical work is meant the perception associated with its aesthetic assessment and awareness of music, its ideas, the nature of experience and all the expressive means that form the musical image" .

The thesis about the unity of the emotional and the conscious in the perception of music also takes place in the works of Russian scientists. One of the first to formulate it was B.V. Asafiev. “Many people listen to music,” he wrote, “but only a few hear, especially instrumental music. ... Under instrumental music nice to dream. To hear in such a way as to appreciate art is already intense attention, which means mental work, speculation. The unity of the emotional and conscious in the perception and performance of music is one of the basic principles of musical pedagogy.

Logic plays an important role in the perception of music. thinking. All his operations (analysis, synthesis) and forms (judgment, conclusion) are aimed at the perception of the musical image and means of musical expression. Without it, the process of musical perception could not take place.

One of the most important operations of thinking for the perception of music is comparison. At the heart of the perception, "becoming" of music lies precisely the process of comparing, for example, the intonations of the previous and subsequent sounds in one work, repeating complexes of consonances in different works.

Of essential importance are the operations of classification, generalizations, which help to attribute a piece of music to certain genre or style that, in turn. Makes it much easier to understand. Forms of thinking - judgment and inference - underlie the evaluation of specific musical works, the whole process artistic education and musical culture in general.

Selectivity perception is manifested in the ability to catch the expressiveness of intonations and follow the development of melodies, musical themes. One can speak about the selectivity of musical perception in a broader sense - as a preference for one or another musical style, genre, and one or another piece of music. In this case, the selectivity of perception can be considered as the basis for the formation of artistic taste.

Selectivity as a property of musical perception, in particular, in children, has not yet been studied enough. Mass pedagogical observations and surveys show that the majority of children prefer "light" music to "serious" music. But this phenomenon has not been scientifically explained. It is not clear why children like some works and are accessible, while they reject others as boring and incomprehensible.

Musical perception is a complex process, which is based on the ability to hear, experience the musical content of a work as an artistic and figurative reflection of reality. In the process of perception, the listener, as it were, “gets used” to the musical images of the work. However, to feel the mood in the music is not all, it is important to comprehend the idea of ​​the piece. The structure of adequate thoughts and feelings, understanding of the idea arise in the listener due to the activation of his musical thinking, which depends on the level of general and musical development.

Summing up the analysis of the process of musical perception, it is worth noting that the need for the development of perception has been repeatedly pointed out by musicologists-practitioners who work directly with the children's audience. The development of musical perception expands and strengthens the musical experience of students, activates their thinking. An important condition for the development of the ability to think is direct emotional perception. Only after it can one proceed to a detailed analysis of the work.

In this way, proper organization"listening" to music, taking into account the peculiarities of perception contribute to the activation of musical activity, the development of interests, musical tastes students, and, consequently, the gradual formation of musical culture.

The assimilation of knowledge, skills and abilities in music education is carried out on art material. The perception of musical works in all types of activity is always peculiar and has a creative character. Creative learning activity should permeate the entire process of assimilating knowledge, developing skills and abilities, and therefore should not stand out as an independent element of learning.

In connection with the above, the elements of the content of musical education are: - the experience of a person's emotional and moral attitude to reality, embodied in music (that is, music itself, "musical material"); - musical knowledge; - musical skills; - musical skills.

Selection criteria musical material - the main component of the content of musical education, are:

Artistry;

Enthusiasm and accessibility for children;



Pedagogical expediency;

Educational value (the possibility of forming moral ideals and aesthetic tastes of students.

musical knowledge. Knowledge of two levels serves as the basis for understanding musical art: 1) knowledge that contributes to the formation of a holistic view of musical art; 2) knowledge that helps the perception of specific musical works.

The first level of knowledge characterizes the nature of musical art as social phenomenon, its function and role in public life, aesthetic standards.

The second level is knowledge about the essential features of the musical language, the patterns of construction and development of music, about the means of musical expression.

These provisions musical science determined the approach to the choice of knowledge about music. In accordance with them, D.B. Kabalevsky singled out generalized (“key” knowledge) in the content of musical education. This is knowledge that reflects the most general phenomena of musical art. They characterize the typical, stable connections between music and life, and correlate with the patterns of children's musical development. Key knowledge is necessary to understand the art of music and its individual works.

In the content of school musical education, the second group of knowledge correlates with knowledge that is commonly called “private” (D.B. Kabalevsky). They are subordinate to the key. This category includes knowledge about individual specific elements of musical speech (pitch, metrorhythm, tempo, dynamics, mode, timbre, agogics, etc.), biographical information about composers, performers, about the history of the creation of a work, knowledge of musical notation, etc.

Musical Skills. The perception of music is the basis for the formation of the musical culture of schoolchildren. Its essential side is awareness. Perception is closely related to knowledge and includes artistic appreciation. The ability to give an aesthetic assessment of a work can serve as one of the indicators of a student's musical culture. Perception is the basis of all types of performance, since it is impossible without an emotional, conscious attitude to music, without its evaluation.

So, the ability of students to apply knowledge in practice, in the process of perceiving music, is manifested in the formation of musical skills.

"Key" knowledge is used in all types of musical educational activities of schoolchildren, therefore, the skills formed on their basis are considered as leading ones.

Along with the leading musical skills, private ones are distinguished, which are also formed in specific forms of activity.

Among the "private" skills, three groups can be distinguished:

Skills related to knowledge about individual elements of musical speech (pitch, rhythm, timbre, etc.);

Skills related to the application of musical knowledge about composers, performers, musical instruments, etc.;

Skills associated with knowledge of musical notation.

Thus, leading and particular skills correlate with key and particular knowledge, as well as with various forms of musical learning activities.

musical skills are in direct connection with the educational musical activity of schoolchildren and perform in certain methods of performing music. Performing skills are also formed on the basis of musical perception. Without their acquisition, it is impossible to talk about the complete assimilation of the content of training.

Topic 6:

Concept musical education and a music program by D.B. Kabalevsky: past and present

1. General characteristics

By the 70s of the twentieth century, domestic pedagogy had accumulated a lot of experience in the field of musical education of schoolchildren. At the same time, there is a need to create a unified concept that generalizes it, giving clear directions for the formation of the musical culture of schoolchildren.

The concept, according to the dictionary, is a system of views on the phenomenon, the main point of view from which this phenomenon is considered, the leading idea, etc.

To develop such a concept was proposed to a group of young scientists led by famous composer and public figure Dmitry Borisovich Kabalevsky. The concept and program were developed in the laboratory of the Research Institute of Schools of the Ministry of Education of the RSFSR in the period from 1973 to 1979. The main ideas of the concept are embodied in the article that precedes the music program "Basic principles and methods of the music program for general education schools." The program itself was published in small print runs with the note "Experimental". At the same time, music readers were issued for the musical support of the program, as well as phono readers with recordings of all the works of the program. During the experimental testing of the program, music lessons in one of the schools in Moscow were conducted by Kabalevsky himself. These lessons were shown on television. The book for children “About three whales and about many other things”, written by D.B. Kabalevsky for children.

For mass use, a music program for grades 1-3 (with lesson methodological developments) was released in 1980, and for grades 4-7 in 1982.

Kabalevsky's program is still widely used in our country. It is the starting point for developing new music programs. However, in recent years, this program has increasingly become the object of criticism. At the same time, it also has a lot of supporters. It seems that it is unreasonable to consider it obsolete and unusable.

This concept is a major achievement of our culture. It absorbed the best experience of domestic pedagogy, and also anticipated a number of qualitatively new processes emerging both in art history and in all aspects of public life. Namely, the desire to preserve and nurture spiritual culture, the recognition of the priority of universal human values. This concept has great potential for development. While maintaining the essence, this development has the following directions:

Development of artistic didactics and theory of art pedagogy;

Substantiation of the musical material of the program;

Expansion of the musical material of the program;

Expansion of the role of improvisation, vocal and instrumental music making;

Enriching the lesson with folklore, sacred music, samples of modern folk musical creativity etc.

One of the most important tasks of a teacher working according to the program of D.B. Kabalevsky - to develop the humanistic ideas of the concept. In their line, the content of the educational process is a spiritual dialogue. different cultures. The content is the process of educating children in a moral and aesthetic attitude to reality, by art itself, by the child’s artistic activity as his “life” in art, by creating himself as a person, looking into himself.

Thus, understanding the content of the concept as the process of the formation of a child's spirituality through music, through experience, feeling and impression, it can be argued that there is nothing to update in the program.

If we talk about updating the content of the program as updating musical material, ways of communicating with music, etc., then this process is embedded in the concept as a permanent, necessary and natural one.

It focuses on the fact that the musical material can be replaced, on the fact that the implementation of the program requires a creative approach of the teacher in choosing methods, forms of practical music-making.

In 1994 a new version of the program was released, which was made by Bader and Sergeeva. The main objectives of the reprint are to eliminate the ideological content of the content, to enable the teacher to show creative initiative in planning lessons. Thus, in this edition, the musical material has undergone a change and the lesson methodological developments have been eliminated.

2. The purpose, objectives, principles and fundamental methods of the music program,

developed under the direction of D.B. Kabalevsky

Purpose of music lessons in a general education school - the upbringing of the musical culture of schoolchildren as a necessary part of their general spiritual culture.

Leading Tasks: 1) the formation of an emotional attitude to music based on its perception; 2) formation of a conscious attitude to music; 3) the formation of an active-practical attitude to music in the process of its performance, primarily choral singing, as the most accessible form of music-making.

Basic principles of the program:

The study of music as a living art, relying on the laws of music itself;

Links between music and life;

Interest and passion for music education;

Unity of emotional and conscious;

Unity of artistic and technical;

Thematic structure of the music program.

According to the last principle, each quarter has its own theme. Gradually becoming more complex and deepening, it is revealed from lesson to lesson. Between quarters and stages (classes) there is a succession. All side, secondary topics are subordinate to the main ones and are studied in connection with them. The topic of each quarter corresponds to one "key" knowledge.

Fundamental methods of the program. The leading methods of the program in their totality are primarily aimed at achieving the goal and organizing the assimilation of content. They contribute to the establishment of the integrity of the process of musical education in a music lesson as an art lesson, that is, they perform regulatory, cognitive and communicative functions. These methods interact with all other methods.

Method musical generalization . Each topic is of a general nature and unites all forms and types of classes. Since the topic is general in nature, it is possible to assimilate it only by the method of generalization. Mastering generalized knowledge by students is based on musical perception. This method is primarily aimed at developing in children a conscious attitude to music, at the formation of musical thinking.

The method of musical generalization acts as a cumulative way of organizing the activities of students, aimed at mastering key knowledge about music, the formation of leading skills.

The method includes a number of sequential actions:

1st action. The task is to activate the musical and life experience of schoolchildren, which is necessary for the introduction of the topic or its deepening. The duration of the preparatory stage is predetermined by the nature of the generalized knowledge. The duration of training also depends on the level of musical experience of students. The main thing is not to allow the study of the topic to take place formally, without relying on auditory experience sufficient for this.

2nd action. The goal is to introduce new knowledge. Of primary importance are techniques of a productive nature - various options for organizing a search situation. In the search process, three points stand out: 1) a task clearly formulated by the teacher; 2) gradually, together with students, solving the problem with the help of leading questions, organizing one or another action; 3) the final conclusion, which the students themselves must make and pronounce.

The 3rd action is connected with the consolidation of knowledge in different types educational activity, with the formation of the ability to independently navigate in music on the basis of acquired knowledge. Implementation this action involves the use of a combination of various techniques of a productive and reproductive nature.

The method of "running" forward and "returning" to the past. The content of the program is a system of interrelated topics. It is important that the lesson in the minds of the teacher and students act as a link in the general theme and the entire program. The teacher needs, on the one hand, to constantly prepare the ground for upcoming topics, on the other hand, to constantly return to the material covered in order to comprehend it at a new level.

When implementing the method, the task of the teacher is to choose the best options for “running in” and “returning” for a particular class. There are connections of three levels here.

1. Connections between the stages of learning 2. Connections between the topics of the quarters. 3. Connections between specific pieces of music in the process of studying the topics of the program.

Method of emotional dramaturgy. Lessons are built mainly on two emotional principles: emotional contrast and consistent enrichment and development of one or another emotional tone of the lesson.

Based on this, the task is to correlate one or another principle of constructing a lesson proposed in the program with specific conditions, the level of musical and general development of students.

The method of emotional drama is primarily aimed at activating the emotional attitude of schoolchildren to music. It contributes to the creation of an atmosphere of enthusiasm, a keen interest in music lessons. This method allows, if necessary, to clarify the sequence of works planned for the lesson (its beginning, continuation, climax - especially important point lesson, at the end) in accordance with the specific conditions of the lesson.

It is important to determine the best combination of forms and types of musical activity (classes) in the conditions of a given class.

The personality of the teacher (his passion for the subject, which is manifested in the performance of music, in judgments, objectivity in assessing students, etc.) is a powerful stimulus for enhancing the activity of schoolchildren in the classroom.

L.P. Kazantseva
Doctor of Arts, Professor of the Astrakhan State Conservatory
and Volgograd State Institute of Arts and Culture

THE CONCEPT OF MUSICAL CONTENT

Since ancient times, human thought has tried to penetrate the secrets of music. One of these secrets, or rather, the key one, was the essence of music. There was no doubt that music can strongly influence a person due to the fact that it contains something in itself. However, what exactly is this meaning, what does it “speak” to a person, what is heard in the sounds - this differently varied question, which has interested many generations of musicians, thinkers, scientists, has not lost its sharpness even today. It is not surprising that the key question for music of its content received very different, sometimes mutually exclusive answers. Here are just a few of them, conditionally grouped by us.

Significantly stands out the area of ​​​​opinions about music as an imprint human:

music is an expression of human feelings and emotions(F. Bouterwek: the musical arts express "feelings without knowledge of the external world according to the laws of human nature. All these arts can indicate only vaguely, paint only very remotely"; L.R. d'Alembert; V.G. Wackenroder; K. M, Weber, F. Chopin, F. Thiersch, J.J. Engel, J. Sand: "The field of music is emotional unrest"; R. Wagner: music "remains even in its extreme manifestations only to in s t v about m "; S. Kierkegaard; R. Rolland; Stendhal; R. Wagner; V. P. Botkin; L. N. Tolstoy: "Music is a shorthand for feelings"; B. M. Teplov: "Content music are feelings, emotions, moods"; L. Berio; A.Ya. Zis; S. Langer; S.Kh. Rappoport; E.A. Sitnitskaya); thinkers of the 17th - 18th centuries. (A. Kircher, I. Mattheson, D. Harris, N. Diletsky and others): music is an expression of affects;

music is an expression of feelings(I. Kant: it “speaks through sensations alone without concepts and, therefore, unlike poetry, leaves nothing for reflection”);

music is an expression of intelligence(I.S. Turgenev: “Music is the mind embodied in beautiful sounds”; J. Xenakis: the essence of music is to “express intelligence with the help of sounds”; R. Wagner: “Music cannot think, but it can to embody a thought"; G. W. Leibniz: "Music is an unconscious exercise of the soul in arithmetic");

music is an expression of the inner world of a person(G.W.F. Hegel: “Music makes subjective inner life its content”; V.A. Sukhomlinsky: “Music unites the moral, emotional and aesthetic spheres of a person”; K.Kh.F. Krause; A.A. Farbshtein ; M. I. Roitershtein: “The main thing that music tells about is the inner world of a person, his spiritual life, his feelings and experiences, his thoughts and moods in their comparison, development”; V. N. Vladimirov; Golovinsky, I. V. Nestiev, A. A. Chernov);

music is an expression of mysterious depths human soul (J.F. Rameau: “Music should appeal to the soul”, “Genuine music is the language of the heart”; A.N. Serov: “Music is the language of the soul; it is the area of ​​feelings and moods; it is the life of the soul expressed in sounds”; F. Grillparzer: "It is precisely vague feelings that are the own field of music"; F. Garcia Lorca: "Music in itself is passion and mystery. Words speak of the human; music expresses what no one knows, no one can explain, but what is more or less in everyone"; H. Riemann: "The content ... of music is formed by melodic, dynamic and agogic ups and downs, bearing the imprint of the spiritual movement that gave rise to them"; A.F. Losev: "Music turns out to be the most intimate and most adequate expression of the elements of spiritual life”);

music is an expression of the inexpressible, the subconscious(V.F. Odoevsky: “Music in itself is an unaccountable art, the art of expressing the inexpressible”; S. Munsch: “Music is an art that expresses the inexpressible. The possession of music is a sphere of the subconscious that cannot be controlled by the mind and touch”; G. G. Neuhaus: "Everything "insoluble", inexpressible, indescribable that constantly lives in the soul of a person, everything "subconscious" (...) is the realm of music. Here are its sources").

The field of ideas about music as an imprint is many-sided extrahuman:

music is an expression of the existential, the Absolute, the Divine(R. De Conde: music calls for an “irrational absolute”; R. Steiner: “The task of music is to embody the spirit that is given to man. Music reproduces the ideal forces that lie behind the material world”; A.N. Skryabin; K.V. .F. Solger: the meaning of music is “the presence of a deity and the dissolution of the soul in the divine ...”; Franz Fischer: “Even a good dance music- religious");

music is an expression of the essence of Being(A. Schopenhauer: “Music in any case expresses only the quintessence of life and its events”, other arts “speak only about the shadow, it is about the essence”; V.V. Medushevsky: “The true content of music is the eternal secrets of being and human soul"; G.V. Sviridov: "Word ... carries the Thought of the World ... Music carries the Feeling, Sensation, Soul of this world"; L. Z. Lyubovsky: "Music is a kind of reflection of the composer's comprehension of Nature, the Universe, Eternity, God. This is her majestic Object»);

music is a reflection of reality(Yu.N. Tyulin: “The content of music is the display reality in specific musical images”; AND I. Ryzhkin: music "provides a complete and multifaceted reflection of social life ... and leads us to a holistic knowledge of reality"; T. Adorno: "The essence of society becomes the essence of music"; A. Webern: “Music is a pattern of nature perceived by the ear”);

music is movement(A. Schelling: music “represents pure movement, as such, in abstraction from the subject”; A.K. Butskoy; R. Arnheim; N.A. Goryukhina: “Question: what is meant by the content of a musical work? Answer: its dialectics own movement"; A.F. Losev: "... pure music has the means to convey ... the ugly element of life, i.e. its pure becoming”; VC. Sukhantseva: "The subject of music ... is the area of ​​re-creation of the procedural nature of being in its actual socio-cultural development..."; L.P. Zarubina: “Music mainly and predominantly depicts the formation”);

music is an expression of the positive(A.V. Schlegel: “Music absorbs only those of our feelings that can be loved for their own sake, those on which our soul can voluntarily linger. Absolute conflict, a negative principle has no way into music. Bad, vile music does not can express, even if she wanted to"; A.N. Serov: "Ambition, stinginess, deceit, like Iago, the malice of Richard III, the sophistication of Goethe's Faust are not musical subjects").

The transitional zone between the first and second regions is also visible, into which the following installations fall:

music is an expression of man and the world(N.A. Rimsky-Korsakov: “The content of works of art is life human spirit and nature in its positive and negative manifestations, expressed in their mutual relations»; G.Z. Apresyan: it “is capable of reflecting the essential phenomena of life by its inherent means, first of all, the feelings and thoughts of people, the spirit of its time, certain ideals”; Yu.A. Kremlin; L.A. Mazel; L.M. Kadtsyn: "The content of musical works is a world of ideas... about the work itself, about the surrounding world, about the listener in this world and, of course, about the author and performer in this world"; B.L. Yavorsky: "Music expresses: a) schemes of motor processes... b) schemes of emotional processes... 3) schemes of volitional processes... 4) schemes of contemplative processes"; A.A. Evdokimova highlights the emotional, intellectual and subject aspects of the musical content);

music is a reflection of reality in the emotions and ideas of a person(Yu.B. Borev; G.A. Frantsuzov: the content of music is “an image of emotional experiences, acting as one of the forms of mental reflection in the mind of a person of objective reality - the subject of musical art”).

Finally, it is important, although somewhat paradoxical, to understand music as an imprint sound:

music is a specific self-valuable world(L.N. Tolstoy: “Music, if it is music, has to say something that can only be expressed by music”; I.F. Stravinsky: “Music expresses itself”; L.L. Sabaneev: “This is a closed a world from which a breakthrough into logic and ideology ... is made only by a violent and artificial way"; H. Eggebrecht: "Music does not mean something extramusical; it means itself");
music - aestheticized sounds (G. Knepler: “Music is everything that functions as music”; B.V. Asafiev: “The subject of music is not a visible or tangible thing, but is the embodiment, or reproduction, of processes-states of sound, or, proceeding from perception, - giving oneself to the state of hearing. What? Complexes of sound in their relationship ... ");

music is a combination of sounds(E. Hanslick: “Music consists of sound sequences, sound forms that have no content other than themselves ... there is no content in it, except for the sound forms we hear, for music not only speaks with sounds, it speaks only sounds”; M. Benze, V. Viora, E. Garni, G. A. Laroche, A. Mol, D. Proroll, N. Ringbom, V. Fuchs, T. Zielinsky: she is a “soundscape”);

music is everything that sounds(I.G. Herder: “Everything that sounds in nature is music”; J. Cage: “Music is sounds, sounds that are heard around us, regardless of whether we are in a concert hall or outside it "; L. Berio: "Music is everything that is listened to with the intention of hearing music").

Of course, it is impossible to cover the palette of opinions that has developed today by a very conditional grouping of thoughts about the essence of music. This obviously does not include positions, say, arising from the interpretation of music in the Middle Ages as a science, from the distinction in music between the composer's opus and the improvisational process of music-making, statements of the ontological nature of music as an art form, transferring the concept of the content of music to the field of perception, etc.

Some modern definitions of musical content, given by V.N. Kholopova - "... its expressive and semantic essence"; A.Yu. Kudryashov - "... integrated system interactions of musical-semantic genera, types and types of signs with their objectively established meanings, as well as subjective-concrete meanings refracted in the composer's individual consciousness, which are further transformed into new meanings in the performing interpretation and listener's perception"; VC. Sukhantseva - "... the area of ​​\u200b\u200bbeing and evolution of rhythmic-intonational complexes in their fundamental conditionality and mediation by the creative subjectivity of the composer"; Yu.N. Kholopov, who believes that the content of music as art is “the inner spiritual aspect of the work; what music expresses" and includes "feelings and experiences in a special aesthetic esk and e ”and“ sound quality that ... is subjectively perceived as one or another pleasantness of the sound material and sound design (in the negative case - a nuisance) ”. The positions of E. Kurt also require comprehension - “... the true, original, moving and shaping content [of music. - L.K.] is the development of mental stress, and music only conveys it in a sensual form ... "; G.E. Konyus - there is technical content (“all the diverse material used for its [musical creation. - L.K.] production”) and artistic content (“impact on the listener; mental experiences caused by sound perceptions; ideas, images, emotions, etc. .P.") .

It is easy to get lost in these and numerous other judgments about the content of music that are not given here, because the understanding of the essence of music known to science today is very different. Nevertheless, we will try to understand this most complicated issue.

The musical content characterizes music as an art form, therefore it should state the most general patterns. Here is how A.N. Sohor: “The content of m[usic] is made up of artistic intonation images, i.e., the results of reflection, transformation and aesthetic evaluation of objective reality in the mind of a musician (composer, performer) imprinted in meaningful sounds (intonations)” .

True in principle, this definition is still far from complete - and we have just seen this many times - it characterizes what music is strong in. Thus, the subject is obviously lost or unjustifiably carefully hidden behind the phrase "objective reality" - a person whose inner spiritual world is invariably attractive to the composer. From the situation of communication between the composer-performer-listener, the last link fell out - the interpretation of what is sounded by the listener - without which the musical content cannot take place.

Given the above, we will give the following definition of musical content: it is the spiritual side of music embodied in the sound, generated by the composer with the help of the objectified constants (genres, pitch systems, composition techniques, forms, etc.) that have developed in it, updated by the performing musician and formed in listener's perception.

Let us characterize the terms of the multicomponent formula presented by us in somewhat more detail.

The first component of our definition informs that musical content is the spiritual side of music. It is generated by the system of artistic representations. Performance- psychologists say - this is a specific image that arises as a result of the complex activity of the human psyche. Being a union of the efforts of perception, memory, imagination, thinking and other properties of a person, the image-representation has a generality (distinguishing it from, say, a direct impression in the image-perception). It absorbs the human experience not only of the present, but also of the past and possible future (which distinguishes it from the image-perception that is in the present and the imagination directed to the future).

If the music is system representations, it is logical to ask the question: about what exactly?

As we saw earlier, subject side musical representations are seen in different ways, and almost every statement is true in some way. In many judgments about music appears human. Indeed, musical art (as, indeed, any other) is intended for man, created and consumed by man. Naturally, it tells first of all about a person, that is, a person, almost in all the richness of his self-manifestation, has become a natural “object” displayed by music.

A person feels, thinks, acts in relations with other people in the center of the philosophical, moral, religious laws of being developed by society; he lives among nature, in the world of things, in geographic space and historical time. Habitat of a person in the broad sense of the word, that is, the macrocosm (relative to the world of the person himself) is also a worthy subject of music.

We will not discard as untenable those statements in which the essence of music is linked with sound. The most controversial, they are also legitimate (in particular for contemporary creativity), especially if they are not focused specifically on sound, but expanded to the entire apparatus of influence that has developed within the limits of music. Thus, the meaning of music can lie in its self-knowledge, in ideas about its own resources, that is, about the microcosm (again, relative to the human world).

The large subject “spheres of competence” (A.I. Burov) of music that we have named - ideas about a person, the world around us and music itself - testify to a wide range of its topics. The aesthetic possibilities of music will be realized by us as even more significant if we remember that the delineated subject areas are by no means necessarily carefully isolated, but are prone to various interpenetrations and mergers.

Formed into musical content, performances are generated and coexist according to the laws of musical art: they are concentrated (say, in the exposition of intonations) and discharged (in intonation development), correlate with the “events” of musical dramaturgy (for example, they replace each other when a new image is introduced) . In full accordance with the spatio-temporal foundations of the integrity of a musical work, the temporal development of some representations (corresponding to musical intonations) thickens and compresses into more capacious (musical images), which, in turn, give rise to the most general representations (semantic "concentrates" - musically - artistic themes and ideas). Subordinate to artistic (musical) laws, ideas generated by music gain the status artistic(musical).

Musical content is not a single performance, but a system of them. This means not just a certain set of them (a set, a complex), but their certain interconnectedness. In terms of their objectivity, representations can be heterogeneous, but ordered in a certain way. In addition, they can have different significance - be primary, secondary, less significant. On the basis of some, more particular, representations, other, more generalized, global ones arise. Combining multiple and heterogeneous representations gives a rather complexly organized system.

The peculiarity of the system lies in its dynamism. A piece of music is arranged in such a way that in the unfolding of the sound fabric, meanings are constantly being created, interacting with those that have already taken place and synthesizing more and more new ones. The content of a musical work is in constant motion, "playing" and "flickering" with facets and shades, revealing its various layers. Inconstantly changeable, it slips away and entails.

Let's go further. Some perceptions arise composer. Since representation is the result of a person's mental activity, it cannot be limited only to an objectively existing subject area. It certainly includes subjective-personal beginning, human reflection. Thus, the representation underlying music is an indissoluble unity of objective and subjective principles. Let's show their unity on such a difficult phenomenon as musical-thematic borrowings.

The musical-thematic material borrowed by the composer, that is, already existing musical statements, finds himself in a difficult situation. On the one hand, it keeps a connection with an already established artistic phenomenon and exists as an objective reality. On the other hand, it is intended to convey other artistic thoughts. In this regard, it is advisable to distinguish between its two statuses: autonomous musical thematism (located in the primary artistic opus) and contextual (acquired through its secondary use). They correspond to autonomous and contextual meanings.

Musical-thematic borrowings can retain their primary meanings in a new work. The semantic side of the fragment from "The Enlightened Night" by A. Schoenberg in the Third Sonata for button accordion by Vl. Zolotarev, despite the arrangement of the orchestral fabric for a solo instrument; in the play “Moz-Art” for two violins by A. Schnittke, the author also manages to draw an easily recognizable initial musical theme symphonies g minor Mozart in a violin duet without distorting its meaning. In both cases, the autonomous and contextual meanings almost coincide, leaving priority for "objectively given".

However, even the most careful handling of borrowing (not excluding the mentioned examples) is under the pressure of a new artistic context, which is aimed at forming semantic layers in the borrowing composer's opus that are not achievable without someone else's music. Thus, at the end of Zolotarev's piece, a fragment from Schoenberg's music acquires an elevated idealization that is unusual for him in the original source, and the key intonation of Mozart's symphony is involved in a witty game played by two violins by Schnittke. Even more obvious is the composer's subjective activity in those cases when borrowings are not given "verbatim", but are preliminarily ("pre-context") dissected. Consequently, even such a detail as the musical thematic material used by the composer bears the stamp of a diverse unity of the "objectively" given and the author's individuality, which is actually natural for art as a whole.

To outline a particular subject area and express their own vision to the composer allow objectified constants- Traditions developed musical culture. An essential feature of the musical content is that it is not created by the composer each time "from scratch", but incorporates certain semantic clots developed by generations of predecessors. These meanings are honed, typified and stored in genres, pitch systems, compositional techniques, musical forms, styles, well-known intonation-signs (intonation formulas like Dies irae, rhetorical figures, symbolism of musical instruments, semantic roles of keys, timbres, etc.). Once in the field of attention of the listener, they evoke certain associations and help to "decipher" the composer's intention, thereby strengthening mutual understanding between the author, performer and listener. Resorting to them as fulcrums, the author layers new semantic layers on this foundation, conveying his artistic ideas to the audience.

The ideas that arise in the composer are formed into an artistic opus, which becomes full-fledged music only if it is interpreted by the performer and perceived by the listener. For us, it is important that the representations that make up the spiritual side of music are formed not only in the composer's opus, but also in performance and perception. The author's ideas are corrected, enriched or impoverished (for example, in cases of loss of the "connection of times" with a large time distance between the composer and the performer or the composer and the listener, a serious genre and style transformation of the "original source" opus, etc.) by the ideas of other subjects and only in this form do they turn from the potential of music into true music as a real phenomenon. Since the situations of interpretations and perceptions are countless and individually unique, it can be argued that the musical content is in continuous motion, that it is a dynamically developing system.

Like any other representation that arises in music, it is “reified”. His " material form» – sound, therefore, the representation "materialized" by him can be called sound or auditory. The sound way of being representations distinguishes music from other forms of art, in which representations are "reified" by line, paint, word, etc.

Of course, any sound is capable of causing a performance, but it does not necessarily create music. In order to get out of the depths of primordial "noises" and become musical, that is, "tone", the sound must be aestheticized, "raised" above the ordinary by its special expressive effect on a person. This is achievable when sound is included (by special means and techniques) in the musical and artistic process. In such a situation, the sound acquires specific - artistic - functions.

However, the recognition of the sound nature of music does not absolutize exclusively auditory representations as purely musical. Others are quite acceptable in it - visual, tactile, tactile, olfactory. Of course, in music they by no means compete with auditory representations and are called upon to generate additional, additional associations that clarify the basic auditory representation. However, even such a modest, auxiliary role of optional performances allows them to coordinate music with other types of art and, more broadly, with other ways of being a person.

Understanding this, one should still refrain from extremes - an overly broad interpretation of music, expressed, for example, by S.I. Savshinsky: “The content of a musical work includes not only what is given in its sound fabric. Merge with it, perhaps expressed or even not expressed by the composer, the program - data theoretical analysis etc. For Beethoven, these are the analyzes of A. Marx, the articles of R. Rolland; for the works of Chopin, these are his “Letters”, Liszt’s books about him, Schumann’s articles, Leuchtentritt’s or Mazel’s analyzes, Anton Rubinstein’s statements, for Glinka and Tchaikovsky these are the articles of Laroche, Serov and Asafiev". It seems that “near-musical” materials, which are certainly important for the perception of music, should not blur the boundaries of music itself, which are predetermined by its sound nature. The latter, however, consists not only in sound as a substance, but also in the subordination of sound to the musical laws of being (sound-pitch, tonal-harmonic, dramatic, and others).

Paying tribute to sound in music as an art form, we nevertheless warn you: its embodiment in sound should not be understood straightforwardly, they say, music is just what sounds right at the moment. Sound as an acoustic phenomenon - the result of fluctuations in an elastic air medium - may be absent "here and now". However, at the same time, in principle, it is reproducible with the help of memories (of previously heard music) and internal hearing (according to the available musical notation). These are the works, a) composed and notated by the author, but not yet voiced, b) living an active stage life, and also c) works that are now (temporarily) not relevant “the totality of already accomplished performing realizations”, “the memory of which has been postponed, stored in the public mind. In those cases when the sound "clothing" of the performances was not found and fixed by the composer, or - in improvisation - presented by the performer, who at the same time also takes on the author's functions, it is not necessary to talk about the musical content, and indeed the musical work. Thus, the musical content of L. Beethoven's Thirty-Second Piano Sonata, which does not sound while reading these lines, quite realistically exists. Nevertheless, it is more or less successfully reconstructable, which would be completely impossible in a hypothetical case, for example, with the Thirty-third sonata of the same author, which does not have sound substance.

So, we found out that the result of the mental activity of a person - a composer, performer, listener - acquires sound "shapes" and forms the spiritual principle of music.

STRUCTURE OF THE CONTENT OF A MUSICAL WORK

If the concept of musical content characterizes music as if from the outside, in comparison with other types of art, then the concept of the content of a musical work has an internal orientation. He denotes the sphere of the spiritual, but not in the maximum generalization (typical of music in general), but in a much greater certainty (typical of a piece of music). The musical content is focused in the content of the musical work and provides this (although not the only one, along with, say, improvisation) way of being music. Between them there are relations "invariant - variant". Preserving all the properties of musical content, the content of a musical work adapts the possibilities of music to its existence in a given form and the solution of an artistic task.

The content of a musical work is specified through a number of concepts. Describing the musical content, we talked about the key importance of performances. Not only in their objectivity, which has become quite obvious, but also in their capacity and artistic purpose in music, the performances are diverse. We single out those that are called musical images.

Musical images are given to a person as a mediation of musical sounds (real or imaginary), sound movement, deployment of musical fabric. In a piece of music, the images not only receive their own sound outlines, but also, interacting with each other in a certain way, add up to a complete figurative and artistic picture.

A musical image is a relatively large or (considering the predominantly temporary nature of music) a long semantic unit of a musical work. It can arise only on the basis of meanings of a smaller scale. These are musical intonations. Musical intonations contain lapidary, non-expanded meanings. They can be likened to words in literary language, developing into verbal units and giving life to a literary image.

Musical intonations also do not exist as “ready-made” meanings and are formed on a certain semantic basis. For them, it becomes the semantic impulses of musical sounds or tones. Standing out in a vast area of ​​sounds, musical sound - tone - is very specific, because it is designed to ensure the life of a work of art. In music, sound is dual. On the one hand, it "decorates", "embodies" the musical content, as mentioned earlier. Objectively belonging environment, the sound takes us to the area of ​​physical and acoustic realities. On the other hand, the sound is selected to solve a certain artistic task, in connection with which it is also endowed with what can be called semantic prerequisites. And although the tone is difficult to attribute to the purely semantic components of music, we include it in the structure of the content of a musical work as an elementary unit that cannot be decomposed into even smaller meanings. In this way, tone limits the lower limit of the content structure rooted in the material substance of music.

Having understood how a musical image is formed from ever smaller semantic units, let's try to go in the opposite direction and consider what content components it, in turn, determines.

Artistic image or their combination in art is found topic works. The same thing happens in music: musical images reveal the theme, understood hereinafter as a general aesthetic category. The theme is different to a large extent generalization, which allows it to cover the entire work or a large part of it. At the same time, ties with integral sound are weakening in the theme, a tendency is ripening in it to free itself from the "dictatorship" of sound and intrinsically valuable being in the world of abstractions.

The final expression of the tendency to mediate sound by semantic units of varying degrees of capacity (intonation - images - theme) gets in idea musical work. The idea is the most generalized, abstracted and directed from sounds to the realm of the ideal, where the sound specificity of music is practically leveled in the face of ideas of scientific, religious, philosophical, and ethical origin. Thus, the idea becomes another limit of the structure of the content of a musical work, which is seen as vertically directed from the material to the ideal.

The semantic components that we have identified are lined up in a hierarchy, at each level of which certain semantic units are formed. These levels are represented tone, musical intonation, musical image, theme and idea of ​​a musical work.

The named components of the content of a musical work do not exhaust all the elements of the structure, they represent only its backbone. The structure cannot be complete without some other elements occupying specific places in it. One of these elements is means of musical expression. On the one hand, the means of musical expression are quite material, because the pitch, dynamics, timbre, articulation and other parameters are associated with a rather distinct sound. On the other hand, they sometimes crystallize meanings that become truly intonational (in some melodic patterns, rhythmic formulas, harmonic turns). Therefore, their position in the structure of the content of a musical work would be correctly called intermediate between tone and musical intonation, moreover, one in which they seem to be partly rooted in tone, and partly “grow” into musical intonation.

Another indispensable element of the structure of the content of a musical work is author's start. A piece of music serves the communication of two personalities - the listener and the composer, therefore it is so important in it how the composer appears in his own composition. The author's personality captures itself by no means only in style, but also penetrates deeply into the area of ​​content. We can meet her not only in a musical image (the image of the author), but also in a personally colored musical intonation (by F. Chopin, R. Schumann, F. Liszt, S. Rachmaninov, D. Shostakovich), and in a personally meaningful sound palette (for example, J. Cage, J. Xenakis, S. Gubaidulina), in the subject (self-portrait), etc. It turns out that in the territory of one's own opus, the author's personality is, in principle, ubiquitous. Knowing this, we can assert that the author's principle occupies a special position - it is potentially distributed throughout the entire structure of the content of a musical work and can be localized in one or more of its components.

In the structure of the content of a musical work there is another, not previously named, element. It - dramaturgy. Almost all of its activity is aimed at ensuring the deployment process, although the latter goes through milestones and stages marked by one or another "event". This process takes place in different planes musical work: in the means of musical expression (as “tonal dramaturgy”, “timbre dramaturgy”, etc.), intonation (“intonation dramaturgy”), images (“figurative-artistic” or “ musical dramaturgy"). Thus, dramaturgy, closely interacting with other elements, takes on the role of an energy force that stimulates the self-movement of musical content.

The presence of a driving component in the structure of the content of a musical work is symptomatic. Behind it stands an essential pattern for music: true content is not a static construction, but a process. It unfolds in the non-stop movement of the continuous creation of new meanings, the slipping away of already manifested meanings, changes in previously held meanings (rethinking), all kinds of interactions of meanings, etc.

As we can see, the hierarchically organized backbone of the structure was replenished with a number of other functionally unique elements. Thus, a universal structure is built that makes possible the existence of musical content in a piece of music.

It is easy to see that the components of the structure are added up in the composer's opus. However, the process of meaning creation, which begins in the activity of the composer, continues, as already mentioned, by the performer and the listener. In performing and listening creative activity, what is intended by the composer is corrected and transformed, which means that no new elements are added to the structure of the content of a musical work. In performing and listening activities, respectively, we should talk about transformation, change in the formed structure.

In the unstoppable deployment of the process of meaning generation, the structure plays the role of a flexible framework that streamlines, “disciplines” this process, that is, a kind of “bearing support” of the semantic flow. Structural units are "nodes" (B.V. Asafiev) of fluid content-becoming. Therefore, the most scrupulous study of the integral structure still does not give grounds for counting on the final solution of the problem of comprehending the phenomenon of content.

If we proceed from the chronotope (spatio-temporal nature) of a musical work, then the most important feature the process of creating the content of a musical work. It lies in its dual orientation. Meanings are incremented not only in the sequentially-temporal, horizontal, more clearly conscious movement of musical thought, but also spatially - along the "vertical". The vertical vector reveals itself in the formation of hierarchically correlated meanings, that is, in the crystallization by semantic units of a lower level - meanings of a higher level. It is described in detail by V.V. Medushevsky. The researcher gives seven types of interaction of means of musical expression, tracing the corresponding paths from the meanings of the elements of music to musical intonation or musical image:

interpretation relation: impulsive movements (texture) + joyful, light coloring (mode, register) \u003d glee, or impulsive movements + sad colors \u003d despair, or expectation + tension \u003d longing, attraction;

detail ratio: mournful intonations (descending chromaticisms or minor triads with aching retention) + tension, languor (aggravated modal relations) = sorrow;

metaphorical transfer: fullness of texture, as a phonic quality, as the fullness of space with sounds and voices + tension, aspiration, languor = fullness of feeling (“flood of feelings”, “sea of ​​flowers”);

suppression of semantics, reversal of meaning: joy, light (major) + sadness, darkness (low register, etc.) = sadness, darkness;

cutting off polysemy, highlighting hidden meanings: liberation from peripheral semantic nuances in favor of a few main ones;

interlevel contradictions, inconsistencies, exaggerations: deformations in the structure of emotion (“one-time contrast”, discovered by T.N. Livanova);

parallel interaction (synonymy): mournful sighs (in the part of the soloist) + mournful sighs (in the part of the orchestra) \u003d amplification, brightening of the meaning or aspiration (functional inclinations) + aspiration (melodic, linear inclinations) \u003d amplification of the meaning.

The "algebra of semantic interactions" developed by Medushevsky, it would seem, solves a modest particular problem - it systematizes the ways of meaning formation. But for the study of musical content, it means much more. Firstly, we see that although the scientist studies the interaction of the means of musical expressiveness, leading to the embodiment of emotion, in fact, the range of action of the formulas given by him can be extended to other results, that is, extended to images of mental processes, images-landscapes, etc. .d. In other words, we have before us universal schemes for the formation of meanings in music.

Secondly, “algebra” makes it possible to understand that “the content of a musical work is not formally deducible from the linguistic meanings of the means used,” since the elements of music also synthesize meanings that are quite different from their own. This idea can be developed and expanded: the content of a musical work is not reducible to any of the components of the structure (musical image, theme, intonation, etc.), no matter how deeply it is developed. It certainly implies the interconnectedness of a whole complex of components.

The third conclusion allowed by the formulas described above is as follows: the mechanism of formation of new meanings that they reveal “works” not only at the levels of means of musical expressiveness and images, but also at other “levels” of the structure of the content of a musical work.

Another conclusion follows from the foregoing considerations. When synthesizing new meanings, there is a “ejection” to a higher level of the hierarchical structure, thereby turning on the mechanism of transitions from a lower level to a higher one, from it to a higher one, etc. At the same time, each lower level turns out to be the “soil”, the foundation for the one above it. Resorting to the general philosophical categories of "content" and "form", which are essentially different from the musical and aesthetic categories of the same name, which we will constantly use later, we can say that each lower level correlates with a higher one both in form and content, and transitions with from one level to another are equivalent to transitions of form into content.

The structure of the content of a musical work that we discovered contains the most general patterns. As such, it is universal. Any work complies with these patterns, but in its own way overcomes the schematic structure. The invariant structure is detailed, filled with specifics that correspond to the individuality of each individual opus.

Since a piece of music absorbs, in addition to results, composer creativity, as well as the activities of the performer and listener, the content of a musical work is unthinkable without taking them into account. However, as soon as it became clear that the structure formed in the composer's opus is individualized in performance and perception, but not replenished with new elements, it is legitimate to call it not only the structure of the composer's content (on which we subsequently actually focus our attention), but also the structure of the content of a musical work. .

Even the most detailed structure is not able to capture the holistic content of the work. Music always hides something elusive, “indescribable”. Penetrating into the smallest "cells" and "pores" of the opus, becoming its "air", it practically does not lend itself not only to analysis, but, as a rule, to awareness, which is why it received the name "unconscious". Therefore, taking on the task of comprehending the content of a musical work, we must understand that in its entirety it can hardly be grasped by the mind. There always remain those "beyond" depths of content that are still inaccessible to consciousness, and therefore mysterious. Mastering the structure of the content of a musical work, we must remember that the content is unlikely to be revealed to us in all its integrity and depth, because it is in principle inexhaustible. No matter how carefully we analyze it, we still remove only the surface layer, behind which lies a lot of artistically valuable, aesthetically affecting the listener.

“If someone is content with knowing the thoughts, tendencies, goals and edifications contained in a poem or story, then he is content with very little, and he simply did not notice the secrets of art, its truth and authenticity,” the modern writer and thinker Herman once said. Hesse. But can't his words also apply to music? Isn't a piece of music an intriguing, alluring mystery? By studying the musical content and its connection with the form, we are trying to lift the veil of this mystery.

NOTES

1. Two fragments from the book: Kazantseva L.P. Fundamentals of the theory of musical content. - Astrakhan: GP JSC IPK "Volga", 2009. 368 p.
2. Kholopova V.N. Theory of Musical Content as a Science // Problems of Musical Science. 2007. No. 1. S. 17.
3. Kudryashov A.Yu. The theory of musical content. - SPb., 2006. S. 37-38.
4. Sukhantseva V.K.. Music as a human world (from the idea of ​​the universe to the philosophy of music). - Kiev, 2000. S. 51.
5. Kholopov Yu.N. Musical form // Musical encyclopedia. - M., 1981. T. 5. Stb. 876.
6. Kholopov Yu.N. To the problem musical analysis// Problems of musical science: Sat. Art. - M., 1985. Issue. 6. S. 141.
7. Kurt E. Romantic harmony and its crisis in Wagner's Tristan. - M., 1975. S. 15.
8. Konyus G.E. Scientific substantiation of musical syntax. - M., 1935. S. 13, 14.
9. Sohor A.N. Music // Musical Encyclopedia. - M., 1976. T. 3. Stb. 731.
10. Recall: spirit is “a philosophical concept meaning an intangible beginning” (Philosophical Encyclopedic Dictionary. - M., 1989. P. 185).
11. Savshinsky S.I.. The work of a pianist on a piece of music. - M., L., 1964. S. 43.
12. N.P. Korykhalova calls the composition, which has not yet been performed, but recorded with notes, a “potential” (“possible”) form of being a musical work, and “already sounded earlier ... which has become a fact of culture, but now not performed ...” - a “virtual” form, rightly believing that “ virtual being is the real being of a musical work" ( Korykhalova N.P. Music interpretation. - L., 1979. S. 148).
13. The structure of the content of a musical work as a kind of hierarchy is considered by G.B. Zulumyan ( Zulumyan G.V. The content of a musical work as an aesthetic problem: Dis. … cand. philosophy Sciences. - M., 1979); M.G. Karpychev (Karpychev M.G. Theoretical problems of the content of music. - Novosibirsk, 1997), I.V. Malyshev ( Malyshev I.V. Musical composition. - M., 1999), N.L. Ocheretovskaya (Ocheretovskaya N.L. Content and form in music. L., 1985), V.N. Kholopova ( Kholopova V.N. Music as an art form. - St. Petersburg, 2000), E.I. Chigareva ( Chigareva E.I. The organization of expressive means as the basis of the individuality of a musical work (on the example of Mozart's work of the last decade): Abstract of the thesis. dis. … cand. art history. - M., 1975).
14. The role of performing interpretation and listener's perception in the formation of musical content is shown in the book: Kazantseva L.P. Musical content in the context of culture. - Astrakhan, 2009.
15. Medushevsky V.V.. On the problem of semantic syntax (on the artistic modeling of emotions) // Sov. music. 1973. No. 8. S. 25-28.
16. Ibid. C. 28.
17. Nevertheless, musicology tries to unravel its riddle. Let us point out, in particular, the publications of M.G. Aranovsky ( Aranovsky M.G. On two functions of the unconscious in the composer's creative process // Unconscious: nature, functions, research methods. - Tbilisi, 1978. Vol. 2; Aranovsky M.G. Conscious and unconscious in the creative process of the composer: To the formulation of the problem // Questions of musical style. - L., 1978), G.N. Bloodless ( Beskrovnaya G.N. The interaction of intentional and unintentional (improvisational) began as a source of multivariate musical interpretation // Questions of musical performance and pedagogy: Sat. tr. - Astrakhan, 1992), V.N. Kholopova ( Kholopova V.N.. The area of ​​the unconscious in the perception of musical content. - M., 2002).
18.Hesse G. Letters in a circle. - M., 1987. S. 255.

Music, as the end result of mixing sounds and silence in time, conveys the emotional atmosphere, the subtle feelings of the person who wrote it.

According to the works of some scientists, music has the ability to influence both the psychological and physical state of a person. Naturally, such a piece of music has its own character, laid down by the creator either purposefully or unconsciously.

Determining the nature of music by tempo and sound.

From the works of V. I. Petrushin, Russian musician and a teacher-psychologist, we can distinguish the following fundamentals of a musical nature in a work:

  1. the sound and slow tempo convey the emotion of sadness. Such a piece of music can be characterized as sad, conveying sorrow and despondency, carrying regret about the irrevocable bright past.
  2. sound and slow tempo carry a state of peace, contentment. The nature of the musical work in this case includes peace, contemplation and balance.
  3. The minor key and fast tempo suggest the emotion of anger. The nature of the music can be described as passionate, agitated, tensely dramatic.
  4. The major coloring and fast tempo undoubtedly convey the emotions of joy, indicated by an optimistic and life-affirming, cheerful and jubilant character.

It should be emphasized that such elements of expressiveness in music as dynamics, timbre and means of harmony are very important for reflecting any of the emotions, the brightness of the transfer of musical specificity in a work depends on them. If you conduct an experiment and play the same melody in a major or minor sound, fast or slow tempo, then the melody will convey a completely different emotion and, accordingly, the general character of the piece of music will change.

The relationship between the nature of a piece of music and the temperament of the listener.

If we compare the opuses of classical composers with the works contemporary masters, then one can trace a certain trend in the development of musical coloring. It becomes more and more complex and multifaceted, but the emotional background, character, does not change significantly. Therefore, the character of a piece of music is a constant that does not change over time. Works written 2-3 centuries ago have the same effect on the listener as they did during the period of popularity among contemporaries.

It was revealed that a person chooses music for listening not only based on his mood, but unconsciously taking into account his temperament.

  1. melancholic - slow minor music, emotion - sadness.
  2. Choleric - minor, fast music - emotion - anger.
  3. Phlegmatic - slow major music - emotion - calmness.
  4. Sanguine - major, fast music - emotion - joy.

Absolutely all musical works have their own character and temperament. They were originally laid down by the author, guided by feelings and emotions at the time of creation. However, it is not always possible for the listener to decipher exactly what the author wanted to convey, since perception is subjective, passes through the prism of the listener's feelings and emotions, based on his personal temperament.

“You say that words are needed here.

Oh no! It is precisely here that words are not needed, and where they are powerless,

is fully armed with its "language of music ..."

(P. Tchaikovsky)

The desire to embody the features of nature can constantly bring to life significant works of art. After all, nature is so diverse, so rich in miracles, that these miracles would be enough for more than one generation of musicians, poets and artists.

Let us turn to P. Tchaikovsky's piano cycle "The Seasons". Like Vivaldi, each piece by Tchaikovsky has a title corresponding to the name of the month to which it is dedicated, as well as an obligatory subtitle and an epigraph that deepens and concretizes its content.

"January. At the fireside”, “February. Shrovetide", "March. Song of the Lark”, “April. Snowdrop", "May. White Nights”, “June. Barcarolle", "July. Song of the mower”, “August. Harvest”, “September. Hunting”, “October. Autumn song”, “November. On the troika”, “December. Christmas time.

Such images were associated in Tchaikovsky with the perception of special poetry, the soul of each month of the year.

Probably every person certain time of the year evokes a whole layer of images, thoughts, experiences, close and understandable only to him. And if different composers created their own "Seasons", then, of course, these are completely different works that reflect not only the poetry of nature, but the special artistic world of their creators.

However, just as we accept nature in its various manifestations - after all, the rain, and the blizzard, and the cloudy sky have their own charm. autumn day, - in the same way we accept the artistic look full of love that the composer embodies in his works. Therefore, listening to the play “November. On the troika”, we do not think that the troika of horses ringing with bells have long gone from our lives, that November awakens completely different ideas in us. Again and again we plunge into the atmosphere of this beautiful music, which so expressively tells about the “soul of November” that the great Tchaikovsky breathed into it.

Music can tell us about wonderful countries and the eternal poetry of nature, it plunges us into the distant historical past and gives us a dream of a wonderful future, it re-creates the characters of heroes - even those that are already known to us from works of literature or fine art.

History, people, characters, human relationships, pictures of nature - all this is presented in music, but presented in a special way. A correctly found intonation, a bright rhythmic pattern will tell us much more about the work than the longest and most detailed literary description. After all, each art expresses itself by its own, only its own means: literature affects the word, painting - colors and lines, and music conquers with its melodies, rhythms and harmonies.

Listen to the playP. Tchaikovsky "November" from piano cycle"Seasons".

Listen to the sound of the opening section of the play "November" and try to imagine what kind of autumn the composer draws in his music, what feelings and moods its sound evokes in us.

P. Tchaikovsky

Note example 2

P. Tchaikovsky. "November. On a trio." From the piano cycle "The Seasons". First section. Fragment T

You remember that this cycle was conceived by the composer as a kind of musical narrative about the life of nature, about its constantly changing appearance, so subject to the endless movement of the seasons.

The second section of the play brings us closer to the content expressed in the title of the play - "On the troika". The music of this section is enriched by the introduction of a bright visual moment - the ringing of bells. It hints at the merry running of a trio of horses, which was once an integral part of Russian national life. This ringing of bells gives visibility to the sound of the play and at the same time introduces another cheerful moment - the moment of admiring the picture dear to every Russian heart.

Note example 3

P. Tchaikovsky. "November. On a trio." From the piano cycle "The Seasons". Second section. Fragment

The ringing of bells completes the play “November”, the sound of which becomes quieter towards the end, as if the troika, which had just rushed past us, is gradually moving away, disappearing in the haze of a cold autumn day.

Perhaps, in this last fading of sound, the lines from the epigraph to the play are remembered for the first time? Indeed, in the play itself there are no echoes of that promised melancholy and anxiety that are given in the poem. How, then, to understand the programmatic content of the epigraph to the play?

November, the last autumn month, last days before the long winter sets in. Here, ringing bells, the troika rushed - and now it is farther and farther away from us, hiding in the distance, and the ringing of bells is getting quieter ... The play of farewell - such is "November" in its location in the cycle of the seasons. And no matter how cheerful the composer’s gaze is, able to see the charm and fullness of life at any time of the year, he is still not free from a feeling of acute regret, which is always inevitable when parting from something familiar and dear in its own way. And if this is so, then we can say that here programming is significantly expands and deepens musical image, introducing into it a semantic subtext that we would not have caught in music alone.

Questions and tasks

1. Is the mood of P. Tchaikovsky's play "November" in tune with your ideas about this season?

2. What is the role of N. Nekrasov's poem "Troika" in the context of the play "November"?

3. Which of the program components of the work (the name of the month, the title of the play, the epigraph poem), in your opinion, reflects the nature of the music to a greater extent?

4. What do you see as the main similarities and differences in incarnation artistic images seasons in the works of A. Vivaldi and P. Tchaikovsky?

Song repertoire:

Showers. Autumn decorates the road with leaves. Spreading out in apologies, sweeping Wind colorful patches of October. The light is flowing. Chorus Autumn blues sounds in silence. Don't be silent, you write. I want it so much, I want it so much Hear your autumn blues Hear your autumn blues. These sounds Remove my hands from the piano Evaporating, driving away the hearts of flour To the tune of autumn rain. The light is flowing. A string of ripe berries turns purple, And swinging on the branches - on thin needles, It falls like it's melting before our eyes. Chorus Lose Chorus (2 times)

1. What is autumn? This is the sky Crying sky under your feet Birds fly in puddles with clouds Autumn, I haven't been with you for a long time. CHORUS: Autumn. Ships burn in the sky Autumn. I would be away from the earth Where sadness drowns in the sea Autumn, dark distance. 2. What is autumn? These are stones Loyalty over the blackening Neva Autumn again reminded the soul of the most important Autumn, I am deprived of peace again. Autumn. I would be away from the earth Where sadness drowns in the sea Autumn, dark distance. 3. What is autumn? It's the wind Plays again with torn chains Autumn, will we crawl, will we reach dawn, What will happen to the Motherland and to us. Autumn, will we crawl, will we live to see the answer? Autumn, what will happen to us tomorrow. CHORUS: Autumn. Ships burn in the sky Autumn. I would be away from the earth Where sadness drowns in the sea Autumn, dark distance. The city melts in a flock in the mist Autumn, what did I know about you How much will the foliage be torn Autumn is always right.

Editor's Choice
Fish is a source of nutrients necessary for the life of the human body. It can be salted, smoked,...

Elements of Eastern symbolism, Mantras, mudras, what do mandalas do? How to work with a mandala? Skillful application of the sound codes of mantras can...

Modern tool Where to start Burning methods Instruction for beginners Decorative wood burning is an art, ...

The formula and algorithm for calculating the specific gravity in percent There is a set (whole), which includes several components (composite ...
Animal husbandry is a branch of agriculture that specializes in breeding domestic animals. The main purpose of the industry is...
Market share of a company How to calculate a company's market share in practice? This question is often asked by beginner marketers. However,...
The first mode (wave) The first wave (1785-1835) formed a technological mode based on new technologies in textile...
§one. General data Recall: sentences are divided into two-part, the grammatical basis of which consists of two main members - ...
The Great Soviet Encyclopedia gives the following definition of the concept of a dialect (from the Greek diblektos - conversation, dialect, dialect) - this is ...