The article aims at outlining a pragmatic model for the description of musi-cal systems centred upon the notion of genre, meant as a set of both texts and proper-ties mastered by a given individual, set within a given community, historically situat-ed; the works of F. Fabbri served, in this respect, as a solid point of departure. The same musical text may trigger different features and properties for different individu-als and communities, according to the degree and depth of their absolute and relative competences; with Gibson (and Eco), such features and properties may be called af-fordances, a good musical model of which may be Seeger/Tagg’s musemes (the mu-sical equivalent to morphemes, basic musical units of meaning). Following the idea that musical genres’ names do nothing but crystallize possible or actual uses of the music (grounds, in Peircean-Echian terms), and that they propose them as model-uses to a model-listener, the author scrutinized circa 200 names of musical genres (mainly, ascribable to popular music), in order to find the dominant isotopies, namely the semantic recurrences, which identify the chief dimensions by which one can make sense of music. Six major macro-classes, or genre-definers, and as many possi-ble valorizations, have been identified; musical genres’ names may talk about: the sonic or musical features themselves (e.g., industrial, drum’n’bass etc.); the function or the aim of the music (ambient, psychedelic); its lyrical content (love song, Chris-tian metal); the implied socio-cultural context (gangsta, dark); its geographical origin (Latin jazz, Krautrock); a chosen, single element which has been assigned the role to synthesize the essence of the music (baggy, trap). The proposed model com-bines Lotman’s semiospheres and Rastier’s morphological semantics in the light of Xenakis’ music-as-clouds simile; a given musical text is understood as the entry of a blog, featured with a tag cloud (a set of tags; i.e., musical properties, affordances) and ascribed to one or more categories (genres).

I Can e l’ornitorinco. I generi musicali tra semantica lessicale e teoria pragmatica

Gabriele Marino
2017-01-01

Abstract

The article aims at outlining a pragmatic model for the description of musi-cal systems centred upon the notion of genre, meant as a set of both texts and proper-ties mastered by a given individual, set within a given community, historically situat-ed; the works of F. Fabbri served, in this respect, as a solid point of departure. The same musical text may trigger different features and properties for different individu-als and communities, according to the degree and depth of their absolute and relative competences; with Gibson (and Eco), such features and properties may be called af-fordances, a good musical model of which may be Seeger/Tagg’s musemes (the mu-sical equivalent to morphemes, basic musical units of meaning). Following the idea that musical genres’ names do nothing but crystallize possible or actual uses of the music (grounds, in Peircean-Echian terms), and that they propose them as model-uses to a model-listener, the author scrutinized circa 200 names of musical genres (mainly, ascribable to popular music), in order to find the dominant isotopies, namely the semantic recurrences, which identify the chief dimensions by which one can make sense of music. Six major macro-classes, or genre-definers, and as many possi-ble valorizations, have been identified; musical genres’ names may talk about: the sonic or musical features themselves (e.g., industrial, drum’n’bass etc.); the function or the aim of the music (ambient, psychedelic); its lyrical content (love song, Chris-tian metal); the implied socio-cultural context (gangsta, dark); its geographical origin (Latin jazz, Krautrock); a chosen, single element which has been assigned the role to synthesize the essence of the music (baggy, trap). The proposed model com-bines Lotman’s semiospheres and Rastier’s morphological semantics in the light of Xenakis’ music-as-clouds simile; a given musical text is understood as the entry of a blog, featured with a tag cloud (a set of tags; i.e., musical properties, affordances) and ascribed to one or more categories (genres).
2017
11
1
120
151
http://www.rifl.unical.it/index.php/rifl/article/view/418
Musical affordances, musical genres, onomasiology, popular music studies, semiotics
Gabriele Marino
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
Marino_2017_RIFL_Can_ornitorinco_Generi_musicali.pdf

Accesso aperto

Descrizione: articolo principale
Tipo di file: PDF EDITORIALE
Dimensione 1.36 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
1.36 MB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/1713863
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 1
social impact