Scholarly writing on the music of Arvo Pärt is situated primarily in the fields of musicology, cultural and media studies, and, more recently, in terms of theology/spirituality.
Arvo Pärt:
Sounding the Sacred focuses on the representational dimensions of Pärt’s music (including the trope of silence), writing and listening past the fact that its storied effects and affects are carried first and foremost as vibrations through air, impressing themselves on the human body. In response, this ambitiously interdisciplinary volume asks: What of sound and materiality as embodiments of the sacred, as historically specific artifacts, and as elements of creation deeply linked to the human sensorium in Pärt studies? In taking up these questions, the book “de-Platonizes” Pärt studies by demystifying the notion of a single “Pärt sound.” It offers innovative, critical analyses of the historical contexts of Pärt’s experimentation, medievalism, and diverse creative work; it re-sounds the acoustic, theological, and representational grounds of silence in Pärt’s music; it listens with critical openness to the intersections of theology, sacred texts, and spirituality in Pärt’s music; and it positions sensing, performing bodies at the center of musical experience. Building on the conventional score-, biography-, and media-based approaches, this volume reframes Pärt studies around the materiality of sound, its sacredness, and its embodied resonances within secular spaces.
Tabella dei contenuti
I. Introduction
1. Arvo Pärt and the Art of Embodiment | 3
Peter C. Bouteneff, Jeffers Engelhardt, and Robert Saler
2. The Sound—and Hearing—of Arvo Pärt | 8
Peter C. Bouteneff
II. History and Context
3. Sounding Structure, Structured Sound | 25
Toomas Siitan
4. Colorful Dreams: Exploring Pärt’s Soviet Film Music | 36
Christopher J. May
5. Arvo Pärt’s Tintinnabuli and the 1970s Soviet Underground | 68
Kevin C. Karnes
III. Performance
6. The Pärt Sound | 89
Paul Hillier, in conversation with Peter Bouteneff
7. The Rest Is Silence | 107
Andrew Shenton
IV. Materiality and Phenomenology
8. Vibrating, and Silent: Listening to the Material Acoustics of Tintinnabulation | 129
Jeffers Engelhardt
9. Medieval Pärt | 154
Andrew Albin
10. The Piano and the Performing Body in the Music of Arvo Pärt: Phenomenological Perspectives | 177
Maria Cizmic and Adriana Helbig
V. Theology
11. Presence, Absence, and the Ambiguities of Ambiance:
Theological Discourse and the Move to Sound in Pärt Studies | 197
Robert Saler
12. The Materiality of Sound and the Theology of the Incarnation in the Music of Arvo Pärt | 208
Ivan Moody
13. Christian Liturgical Chant and the Musical Reorientation of Arvo Pärt | 220
Alexander Lingas
14. In the Beginning There Was Sound: Hearing, Tintinnabuli, and Musical Meaning in Sufism | 232
Sevin Huriye Yaraman
List of Contributors | 243
Index of Terms | 247
Index of Persons | 252
Works by Other Composers | 256
Works by Arvo Pärt | 257
Circa l’autore
Robert Saler is Research Professor of Religion and Culture and Associate Dean at Christian Theological Seminary in Indianapolis, where he also serves as Executive Director of the Center for Pastoral Excellence. He is the author of Between Magisterium and Marketplace (Fortress, 2014), Theologia Crucis (Cascade, 2016), and All These Things into Position: What Theology Can Learn from Radiohead (Cascade, 2019).