| Abstract | Experiences of movement - of its character and expressiveness - are vitally important to composers, performers and listeners alike. This fact is borne out on several levels of discourse. As action plans, musical scores provide general instructions on how instrumentalists and singers may execute, control and coordinate their motor actions, the details of which are determined largely by the performers’ musical sensibilities. Undergraduate harmony textbooks, theoretical treatises, analytical essays and historical studies all evoke images of movement presumably associated with the musical experience. ‘Motion speak’ may be as commonplace as the phrase ‘C# move to D’, or as colourful as David Lewin’s description (1982: 53) of a striking moment in Schubert’s ‘Auf dem Flusse’, where the singer ‘takes a sharp stone and scratches a G# on the icy surface of the [pianist’s] right hand’. Do these expressions point to a genuine perceptual experience of movement or a propensity to speak in metaphor (or both)? If the former, then what is the nature of that experience? |