Who "speaks" to us in The Sorcerer's Apprentice, in Wagner's operas,
in a Mahler symphony? In asking this question, Carolyn Abbate opens
nineteenth-century operas and instrumental works to new interpretations
as she explores the voices projected by music. The nineteenth-century
metaphor of music that "sings" is thus reanimated in a new context, and
Abbate proposes interpretive strategies that "de-center" music
criticism, that seek the polyphony and dialogism of music, and that
celebrate musical gestures often marginalized by conventional music
analysis.