In this book Jean-Jacques Nattiez, well-known for his pioneering work in
musical semiology, examines both music, and discourse about music, as
products of human activity that are perceived in varying ways by various
cultures. Asking such questions as "what is a musical work" and "what
constitutes music, " Nattiez draws from philosophy, anthropology, music
analysis, and history to propose a global theory for the interpretation
of specific pieces, the phenomenon of music, and the human behaviors
that music elicits. He reviews issues raised by the notion of the
musical sign, and shows how Peircian semiotics, with its image of a
chain or web of meanings, applies to a consideration of music's infinite
and unstable potential for embodying meaning.In exploring the process of
ascribing meaning to music, Nattiez reviews writings on the psychology
of music, non-Western metaphorical descriptions, music-analytical prose,
and writings in the history of musical aesthetics. A final analytical
chapter on the Tristan chord suggests that interpretations of music are
cast in terms of analytical plots shaped by transcendent principles, and
that any semiological consideration of music must account for these
interpretive narratives.