On this site, the scribe of Valdemir Mota Menezes seeks to study musicology in the broadest sense, encompassing all the sciences related to the phenomenon of music.
Musicology
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Musicology (Greek: μουσική mousikē = "music" and -λογία -logia (-logy) = "the study of", from λόγος logos = "word" or "reason") is the scholarly study of music.
The word is used in narrow, broad and intermediate senses. In the
narrow sense, musicology is confined to the music history of Western culture.
In the intermediate sense, it includes all relevant cultures and a
range of musical forms, styles, genres and traditions. In the broad
sense, it includes all musically relevant disciplines and all
manifestations of music in all cultures. The broad meaning corresponds
most closely to the word's etymology, the entry on "musicology" in Grove's dictionary, the entry on "Musikwissenschaft" in Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart, and the classic approach of Adler (1885).
In the broad definition, the parent disciplines of musicology include
history; cultural studiesgender studies; philosophy, aesthetics and semiotics; ethnology and cultural anthropology; archeology and prehistory; psychology and sociology; physiology and neuroscience; acoustics and psychoacoustics; and computer/information sciences and mathematics.
Musicology also has two central, practically oriented subdisciplines
with no parent discipline: performance practice and research, and the
theory, analysis and composition of music. The disciplinary neighbors of
musicology address other forms of art, performance, ritual and communication, including the history and theory of the visual and plastic arts and of architecture; linguistics, literature and theater; religion and theology; and sport. Musical knowledge and know-how are applied in medicine, education and music therapy, which may be regarded as the parent disciplines of Applied Musicology. and
Traditionally, historical musicology has been considered the largest
and most important subdiscipline of musicology. Today, historical
musicology is one of several large subdisciplines. Historical
musicology, ethnomusicology, and systematic musicology are approximately
equal in size - if numbers of active participants at international
conferences is any guide.
Systematic musicology
includes music acoustics,the science and technology of acoustical
musical instruments, physiology, psychology, sociology, philosophy and
computing. Cognitive Musicology is the set of phenomena surrounding the computational modeling of music.