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Music and the Occult : French Musical Philosophies, 1750-1950

Part of the Eastman Studies in Music series
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This book is an adventure into the unexplored territory of French esoteric philosophies and their relation to music.

Occultism and esoterism flourished in nineteenth-century France as they did nowhere else. The book beginswith the anti-Newtonian 'colour harpsicord' of Peere Castel, and closes with the disciples of Rene Guenon and their fierce anti-modernity.

The major forces in between - Fabre d'Olivet, Charles Fournier, Wronski, Lacuria, Saint-Yves d'Alveydre, and their disciples - were all at odds with the world.

They were truly "Renaissance men" ranging over the whole field of learning and not shying away from the enigmas that beset the human condition.

For them, music was a blend of science and art that could bring insight into the cosmic order.

Theirs was a "speculative music" in the tradition of Pythagoras, Plato, Ficino, and Kepler, which is generally thought to have died with the coming of the Enlightenment.

On the contrary, as this book shows, it flourished more vigorously than ever.

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Product Details
187882256X / 9781878822567
Paperback / softback
780.1
18/02/1996
United States
276 pages
386 x 579 mm
Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly/Undergraduate Learn More