We seldom consider how much we mistakenly presume in hewing to
definitions of music that differ dramatically from the standpoint of
other cultures. In What Makes Music European, Marcello Sorce Keller
examines the limitations of accepted wisdom about the concept of music
in Euro-Western culture. His investigations of the conclusions reached
by music researchers of the past several decades considerably upsets the
concepts relied upon by the concert-going public. Sorce Keller
insightfully asks: Who makes the music? Should music be original, and
how much can it be? Why do people identify with songs, pieces, styles,
and repertoire? Why is music so ideological? Why do we misunderstand the
music of different times and places, and why do we enjoy doing so? He
also explores the juxtaposition of economy, society, and music making,
as well as the concept of "illegal harmonies." In What Makes Music
European, Sorce Keller addresses the little-discussed matters that are
essential to an understanding of how music intersects with the life of
so many people. Readers are offered an approach for thinking about music
that depends as much on its history as on the concepts and attitudes of
the social sciences. What Makes Music European concisely demonstrates,
to those familiar with Western music, how peculiar Euro-Western concepts
of music appear from a cross-cultural perspective. At the same time, it
encourages ethnomusicologists to apply their knowledge to Western music
and explain to its public how much of what listeners take for granted
is, at the very least, highly debatable.