3. Tagg: Notes from ‘The Semiology Of Music’ Charles Pierce – triadic model, adapted for music by Tagg: Icon: Where the sound resembles in some shape or form what it is representing. For example moter bike sounds deriving from a guitar. Tagg calls these ‘sonic anapheles’. Index: Where the sound (or any other gesture) points toward its meaning. Tagg uses Synecdoche as an example of how one small element can represent something larger. Smoke = Fire! Two fingered tapping represents a certain type of rock music! A certain type of fashion equates to a style of music, etc. Symbol: (Tagg describes this as ‘conventional’ or ‘arbitrary’ (both mean the same thing!). Tagg argues that manymusical gestures are not ‘iconic, or indexical, but ‘arbitrary’ - connected only by convention. This is the case for most words in our language! He does not give any musical examples, but William Echard’sTypical Featuresassist with clarification. For example
4. Typical Features The use of electronic drums in certain types of dance music. The use of backing vocals in do-wop. Clichés (Indexical!) The use of distorted guitar in rock music. Certain types of fashion associated with a style of music. More on this next week!
5. Peirce Cont Semiosis: Peirce’s name for how signs can change their meaning over time. Tagg– ‘In short, the same set of musical sounds does not ‘mean’ the same thing in different cultures or at different times in the history of the same culture’ (p.7).
6. Ferdinand de Saussure: Dyadic model 1) Signifier(a ‘sign’: For example a distorted guitar, or a type of fashion) Signified(what it stands for: For example Rock Music)
7. Important Terminologies Polysemy: Proposes that music can mean different things to different people or even many things to the same person. It is therefore polysemic in nature. This takes us back to our Week 1 session. The 4 questions I suggested regarding the meaning in music were -
8. Musical MeaningFour Basic Questions Can music communicate anything beyond notes, sounds and textures? Is this ‘meaning’ universal or personal? How do we (or can we) communicate this meaning to others? How do we go about comprehending (and writing about) this meaning? Polysemy can be considered ‘empirical’, as opposed to Plato’s ‘rationalism’ (where we can’t trust our perceptions)
10. Terminology Cont Intrasubjective analysis: Personal account of ones own reactions to music. Intersubjective analysis: An account that takes numerous accounts of a piece of music into consideration. Interobjective analysis: compares pieces of music to each other.
11. Performance practices and techniques can give a song its ‘unique’ character. Can impact both live music making and recorded music. Recording changes what may originally have been considered an improvised moment into something that can be analysed repeatedly. How does the musician communicate their musical persona in a recorded or live performance?- In a single take? Via overdubs? Are they being themselves or someone else? How do they combine, time, space and place? How do specific musical and bodily gestures indicate meaning? etc Performance Analysis
12. Some Factors to Consider Many musicians and producers have a sound that is associated with them: Hendrix guitar sound Phil Collins drum sound Duane Eddy guitar sound Phil Spector production All of these are sometimes a combination of performance style and recorded sound.
13. What occurs in terms of reception when musicians of different styles and traditions combine? For example:
16. Genre Synecdoche “In verbal language, a synecdoche denotes a figure of speech in which a part substitutes the whole, as in the expression 'all hands on deck', implying, at least from the captain's view, that the sailors' brawn is worth more than their brain. A musical synecdoche would therefore be a set of musical structures inside a given musical style that refer to another (different, 'foreign', 'alien') musical style by citing one or two elements supposed to be typical of that 'other' style when heard in the context of the style into which those 'foreign' elements are imported. By citing part of the other style, the citation then alludes not only to that other style in its entirety but also potentially refers to the complete genre of which that other musical style is a subset” (TaggTowards a Sign Typology of Music )
17. ‘Intentional and ‘Extensional aspects of performance. Intentional: Meaning in the performance as the players have more freedom Extensional: Meaning in the notation
18. Time and Place in performance Interesting to examine how the time and location of a recording influences the sound. Many artists have used specific ‘places’ to influence a sound. For Example: Phil Spector – Gold Star Studios in Hollywood. Led Zeppelin (4th album) Headley Grange Buddy Holly: Norman Petty’s studio Elvis Presley: Sun Studios Rolling Stones: Muscle Shoals Studio
19. Sometimes the peculiarities of a room may lead to a specific recording technique and therefore sound. Buddy Holly: (“Not Fade Away”) Studio too small for drums – used cardboard boxes Note how The Rolling Stones attempted to emulate this sound in the UK with their version of the song. Stax Studios: Size of room, and the fact that musicians played together without headphones, sometimes led to vocal performances being ahead of the beat (according to legend!).
22. Posthumous Duets Jimi Hendrix: Crash Landing The Beatles Anthology: John Lennon Nat King Cole and Natalie Cole: “Unforgettable” Patsy Cline-Jim Reeves: “I Fall to Pieces” (1982) Hank Williams Jr and Sr: “There’s a Tear in my Beer”
23. Personal example: Sarah Jane Morris A Certain Kind Of Freedom (1990) In today's digital age – unity of time and place is no longer a prerequisite for studio performance.
24. One Artist – Multiple Overdubs Les Paul (Listen) Stevie Wonder (Listen) Mike Oldfield (Listen) Many modern dance music over the last 20 years or so is documented by a single ‘performer’.
25. Studio based ‘Virtual Performances’ Techniques include: Compiling the best aspects of numerous takes, as opposed to going with a ‘single take’. ‘Punching in’ to redo specific aspects of a performance Digital enhanced tuning and timing Using a ‘sub mix’ to (for example bass and drums) to bring about a specific type of performance (In this case, it may be a particularly ‘tight’ relationship between the instruments) Other sub mixes could focus on the interaction between instruments.