Neoconservative postmodernism

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In music, neoconservative postmodernism is "a sort of 'postmodernism of reaction',"[1] which values, "textual unity and organicism as totalizing musical structures," like, "latter-day modernists,"[2] and includes composers such as Fred Lerdahl, John Harbison, and Steve Reich.[3]

Neoconservative modernism...critically engages modernism, but rejects it out of hand. Neoconservative composers employ premodern styles in an attempt to bring a new type of coherence to the 'heterogeneous present' and re-establish the dominance of Western musical practice. Jann Pasler notes the musical characteristics that are indicative of a neoconservative postmodernism: "In music, we all know about the nostalgia that has gripped composers in recent years, resulting in neo-romantic works ... the sudden popularity of writing operas and symphonies again, of construing one's ideas in tonal terms. ...Many of those returning to romantic sentiment, narrative curve, or simple melody wish to entice audiences back to the concert hall. To the extent that these developments are a true "about face," they represent a postmodernism of reaction, a return to pre-modernist musical thinking[emphasis added]." (Pasler 1993, 17)[4]

Neoconservative, "postmodernism is understood as a 'return to the verities of tradition (in art, family, religion ...)' and where, crucially, modernism 'is reduced to a style ... and condemned or excised entirely as a cultural mistake; pre- and postmodern elements are then elided, and the humanist tradition is preserved.'"[5]

Sources

  1. Jonathan Kramer (1995). "Beyond Unity: Toward an Understanding of Musical Postmodernism," pp. 22, 24. In Concert Music, Rock, and Jazz since 1945, ed. Elizabeth West Marvin and Richard Hermann, 11-34. Rochester, N.Y.: University of Rochester Press. ISBN 1-58046-096-8. quoted in
    John Brackett (2008). John Zorn: Tradition and Transgression, p. xviii. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-22025-7.
  2. Kramer (1995) cited in Brackett (2008), p. xviii.
  3. Brackett (2008), p. xviii.
  4. Judith Irene Lochhead (2002). Postmodern Music/Postmodern Thought, p. 236. ISBN 978-0-8153-3819-2.
  5. Hal Foster (1998), ed. The Anti-Aesthetic: Essays on Postmodern Culture, xiii. New York: New Press. ISBN 1-56584-742-3. quoted in Brackett (2008), p. xviii.

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