Page 126 - Composing Processes and Artistic Agency
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Musicological perspectives on composing  115

            “Source Studies” that have emerged from the Foundation equally emphasise
            that the research interests markedly transcend any purely philological dimension:
            “Only where the philological findings are successfully related to the compo-
            ser’s creative-poetical and aesthetic conditions is it possible to come close to
            the complex process of creating” (Meyer 1993: 7). In contrast to Adorno’s
            verdict, these studies likewise champion the belief that knowledge about the
            process of composing does contribute to a more comprehensive understanding
            of the finished composition. Thus, a great variety of sources can show the
            different ideas or even fractures that may develop over the course of the different
            phases of the process of composing, which substantially relativise the very
            persistent notion of a piece of music as an “inevitable result of musical planning”
            (Meyer 1993: 8 – our translation). Every result could always also have looked
            different. This underlines the question of where to locate the “actual act” of
            composing, if the intention is to differentiate such an act from precompositional
            phases of organisation.
              Friedemann Sallis’ most recent research (Sallis 2015) also far exceeds mere
            philological interests. His case studies, which extend over the past 400 years
            of the history of composing, are more closely focused on the processual aspect
            of composing than his previous appraisals. This is partly shown in the fact
            that he both takes into account the relevance of objects used during composing
            and delineates the problem areas that might arise due to the integration of
            sketches into music-analysis practice.
              Regardless of all the afore-mentioned transformations and expansions of
            research perspectives, however, contemporary musicology still overwhelmingly
            focuses on gaining a deeper understanding of the finished product, rather
            than on the specific nature of the creative process. The fixation with written
            sources remains just as marked, even in cases where it would be possible to
            interview their creators.


            4.1.2 Asking the composers
            Friedrich von Hausegger, the music critic and lecturer in aesthetics and the
            history of musical art, was probably the first scholar to deal extensively and in
            several publications with artists’ creative processes by using more than just
            the available scores and work sketches. He still credited the genius, whom he
            contrasted with “smaller minds” (Hausegger 1903: 356 – our translation),
            with finding his path independently of direction, environment or zeitgeist.He
            did not, however, regard this as an insurmountable obstacle to rational
            examination. In view of the emerging psychology of music, Hausegger (1903:
            369) saw the “psychic state of the artist” as a suitable research topic, which
            might give listeners a closer understanding of the essence of a piece than the
            then-predominant approach of the “formal aestheticians”, who used art
            objects. As he argued: “The artist speaks to us through his musical work, and the
            work appears to us as the revelation of his essence, but only if the performing
            artist does indeed know how to put this essence into the work. However, that
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