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Alexander Rehding is Fanny Peabody Professor of Music at
Harvard University Harvard University is a private Ivy League research university in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Founded in 1636 as Harvard College and named for its first benefactor, the Puritan clergyman John Harvard, it is the oldest institution of higher le ...
. Rehding is a music theorist and musicologist with a focus on intellectual history and media theory, known for innovative interdisciplinary work. His publications explore music in a wide range of contexts from
Ancient Greek music Music was almost universally present in ancient Greek society, from marriages, funerals, and religious ceremonies to theatre, folk music, and the ballad-like reciting of epic poetry. It thus played an integral role in the lives of ancient Greek ...
to the
Eurovision Song Contest The Eurovision Song Contest (), sometimes abbreviated to ESC and often known simply as Eurovision, is an international songwriting competition organised annually by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU), featuring participants representing pr ...
—and even in outer space. His research has contributed to
Riemannian theory "Riemannian theory" in general refers to the musical theories of German theorist Hugo Riemann (1849–1919). His theoretical writings cover many topics, including musical logic, notation, harmony, melody, phraseology, the history of music theo ...
, the history of music theory, sound studies, and media archaeology, reaching into the digital humanities and ecomusicology.


Biography

A native of
Hamburg (male), (female) en, Hamburger(s), Hamburgian(s) , timezone1 = Central (CET) , utc_offset1 = +1 , timezone1_DST = Central (CEST) , utc_offset1_DST = +2 , postal ...
, Germany, Rehding was educated at
Queens' College, Cambridge Queens' College is a constituent college of the University of Cambridge. Queens' is one of the oldest colleges of the university, founded in 1448 by Margaret of Anjou. The college spans the River Cam, colloquially referred to as the "light s ...
University. He held research fellowships at
Emmanuel College, Cambridge Emmanuel College is a constituent college of the University of Cambridge. The college was founded in 1584 by Sir Walter Mildmay, Chancellor of the Exchequer to Elizabeth I. The site on which the college sits was once a priory for Dominican mon ...
, the Penn Humanities Forum (now Wolf Humanities Center at the
University of Pennsylvania The University of Pennsylvania (also known as Penn or UPenn) is a private research university in Philadelphia. It is the fourth-oldest institution of higher education in the United States and is ranked among the highest-regarded universitie ...
) and the Society of Fellows in the Liberal Arts at
Princeton University Princeton University is a private university, private research university in Princeton, New Jersey. Founded in 1746 in Elizabeth, New Jersey, Elizabeth as the College of New Jersey, Princeton is the List of Colonial Colleges, fourth-oldest ins ...
before joining the Music Department at
Harvard University Harvard University is a private Ivy League research university in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Founded in 1636 as Harvard College and named for its first benefactor, the Puritan clergyman John Harvard, it is the oldest institution of higher le ...
in 2003, initially as Assistant Professor. He was promoted to a full professorship only two years later, the first successful tenure case in the Music Department in over forty years. In 2009 he was named Fanny Peabody Professor of Music. Rehding served as department chair between 2011 and 2014. At Harvard, Rehding is an Affiliate of the Department of Germanic Languages and Literature, the Department of Visual and Environmental Studies and an Associate of the Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies and the Center for the Environment. From 2006 to 2011 Rehding served as co-editor of Acta Musicologica (the journal of the International Musicological Society), and became Editor-in-chief of the Oxford Handbook Online series in Music in 2011. His has received awards and fellowships from the
John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation The John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation was founded in 1925 by Olga and Simon Guggenheim in memory of their son, who died on April 26, 1922. The organization awards Guggenheim Fellowship Guggenheim Fellowships are grants that have been ...
,
American Council of Learned Societies American(s) may refer to: * American, something of, from, or related to the United States of America, commonly known as the "United States" or "America" ** Americans, citizens and nationals of the United States of America ** American ancestry, pe ...
(ACLS)., the
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation of New York City in the United States, simply known as Mellon Foundation, is a private foundation with five core areas of interest, and endowed with wealth accumulated by Andrew Mellon of the Mellon family of Pitts ...
, and the
Alexander von Humboldt Foundation The Alexander von Humboldt Foundation (german: Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung) is a foundation established by the government of the Federal Republic of Germany and funded by the Federal Foreign Office, the Federal Ministry of Education and Resear ...
. He was a visiting scholar at the
Free University of Berlin The Free University of Berlin (, often abbreviated as FU Berlin or simply FU) is a public research university in Berlin, Germany. It is consistently ranked among Germany's best universities, with particular strengths in political science and t ...
and the
Max Planck Institute for the History of Science The Max Planck Institute for the History of Science (German: Max-Planck-Institut für Wissenschaftsgeschichte) is a scientific research institute founded in March 1994. It is dedicated to addressing fundamental questions of the history of knowledg ...
in Berlin, at the Newhouse Center at
Wellesley College Wellesley College is a private women's liberal arts college in Wellesley, Massachusetts, United States. Founded in 1870 by Henry and Pauline Durant as a female seminary, it is a member of the original Seven Sisters Colleges, an unofficial g ...
, and was Rieman and Baketel Fellow at the Radcliffe Institute of Advanced Study. He was the inaugural recipient of the Jerome Roche award of the
Royal Musical Association The Royal Musical Association (RMA) is a British scholarly society and charity. Founded in 1874, the Association claims to be the second oldest musicological society in the world, after that of the Netherlands. Activities include organizing and sp ...
, and received the Dent Medal awarded jointly by the Royal Musical Association and the
International Musicological Society The International Musicological Society (IMS) is a membership-based organisation for musicology at the international level, with headquarters in Basel, Switzerland. It seeks the advancement of musicological research through international coopera ...
in 2014. Rehding has been active in promoting the field of Sound studies. In 2013 Rehding founded the Sound Lab at Harvard. In 2013/14 he organized the Sawyer Seminars in the Comparative Study of Culture on the topic of “Hearing Modernity.” The website now functions as an archive of the series. Using the resources of sound lab, Rehding launched a number of innovative courses, including The Art of Listening (as part of Harvard’s short-lived “Frameworks in the Humanities” series). With the help of the Sound Lab, Rehding pursues the integration of multi-media projects into scholarship in the context of ongoing efforts to further open up the humanities to the digital domain. In 2015-17 Rehding co-chaired a committee (with then department chair Carol Oja) that designed a new curriculum for Harvard’s music concentration. The curricular reform was notable in that it was unanimously approved by the department but stirred much controversy in the wider field.


Scholarship


History of music theory

Rehding has worked extensively on the influential nineteenth-century German music theorist
Hugo Riemann Karl Wilhelm Julius Hugo Riemann (18 July 1849 – 10 July 1919) was a German musicologist and composer who was among the founders of modern musicology. The leading European music scholar of his time, he was active and influential as both a musi ...
, contributing to the historical figure as well as
Neo-Riemannian theory Neo-Riemannian theory is a loose collection of ideas present in the writings of music theorists such as David Lewin, Brian Hyer, Richard Cohn, and Henry Klumpenhouwer. What binds these ideas is a central commitment to relating harmonies directly t ...
. Rehding reconstructs the cultural and philosophical contexts in nineteenth-century Germany that allowed Riemann’s problematic ideas to appear compelling and cogent, and explores particularly Riemann’s encounters with non-Western music and the early period of sound reproduction. The question of encounters of Western music theory with other musical traditions and repertories has guided much of Rehding’s work in the history of music theory—covering a range of topics including ancient Greek music and the Enlightenment interest in Chinese music. His work on ancient Egyptian music takes as a starting point the paradox that no usable traces of this musical tradition survive, but it formed an essential early chapter in the general sweep of music history. The multiple attempts to reconstruct this repertory (without any facts) reveal much about changing historiographic assumptions. Rehding’s book ''Music from Earth'' (with Daniel Chua) takes this interest in the musical “other” to the largest level: in 1977
NASA The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA ) is an independent agency of the US federal government responsible for the civil space program, aeronautics research, and space research. NASA was established in 1958, succeeding t ...
sent a collection of world music into outer space, the
Voyager Golden Record The Voyager Golden Records are two phonograph records that were included aboard both Voyager spacecraft launched in 1977. The records contain sounds and images selected to portray the diversity of life and culture on Earth, and are intended for ...
, in hopes that someone out there might find it some time in the distant future. Their project explores in an extended thought experiment NASA’s assumption that music can be used to communicate with extraterrestrials and imagines what a
posthuman Posthuman or post-human is a concept originating in the fields of science fiction, futurology, contemporary art, and philosophy that means a person or entity that exists in a state beyond being human. The concept aims at addressing a variety of ...
music theory might look like.


Media aesthetics

A second major line of Rehding’s research, extending from Hugo Riemann’s diatribes against the modern technology of phonography in the late nineteenth century, explores the impact of technological media on musical thought. The wider ramifications of questions of transmission and reconstruction led Rehding to an engagement with musical media, including notation and recording technology. In particular Rehding brings German media theory (
Friedrich Kittler Friedrich A. Kittler (June 12, 1943 – October 18, 2011) was a literary scholar and a media theorist. His works relate to media, technology, and the military. Biography Friedrich Adolf Kittler was born in 1943 in Rochlitz in Saxony. His fami ...
, Sybille Krämer,
Wolfgang Ernst Wolfgang Hermann Wernher Ernst (born 1956 in Bonn, Germany) is a German lawyer and Regius Professor of Civil Law at the University of Oxford. Life Ernst studied from 1976 to 1980 at the University of Bonn and the Goethe University Frankfurt ...
) to bear on music theory. The mechanical
siren Siren or sirens may refer to: Common meanings * Siren (alarm), a loud acoustic alarm used to alert people to emergencies * Siren (mythology), an enchanting but dangerous monster in Greek mythology Places * Siren (town), Wisconsin * Siren, Wisc ...
—an unlikely musical instrument—has played an important part in shaping Rehding’s thinking about sound media, as has the little-known music theorist
Friedrich Wilhelm Opelt Friedrich Wilhelm Opelt (9 June 1794 – 22 September 1863) was a musicologist, a mathematician, and an astronomer. At one point, he held the title of Geheimrat (the title of the highest advising officials at the Imperial, royal or principal courts ...
. Much of Rehding’s work foregrounds the role of musical instruments in theorizing. He proposes that we regard them as media—promoting and inhibiting certain kinds of sounding data—that allow theorists to make certain insights. This intersection with Critical Organology,
History of Science The history of science covers the development of science from ancient times to the present. It encompasses all three major branches of science: natural, social, and formal. Science's earliest roots can be traced to Ancient Egypt and Meso ...
, and
Thing theory Thing theory is a branch of critical theory that focuses on human–object interactions in literature and culture. It borrows from Heidegger's distinction between objects and things, which posits that an object becomes a thing when it can no longe ...
is explored in a number of works. His monograph on
Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony The Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125, is a choral symphony, the final complete symphony by Ludwig van Beethoven, composed between 1822 and 1824. It was first performed in Vienna on 7 May 1824. The symphony is regarded by many critics and musi ...
doubles as an exploration of
media theory Media studies is a discipline and field of study that deals with the content, history, and effects of various media; in particular, the mass media. Media Studies may draw on traditions from both the social sciences and the humanities, but mostly ...
. It proposes an anti-chronological approach that re-hears this central work of the musical canon through its digital reimagination in Leif Inge’s
9 Beet Stretch 9 Beet Stretch, by Scandinavian sound artist Leif Inge, is a piece of idea-based sound art made of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony. The source recording, a Naxos recording conducted by Béla Drahos with the Nicolaus Esterházy Sinfonia and Chorus (Na ...
(2002). Rehding has collaborated on the topic of
neuroaesthetics Neuroesthetics ( or neuroaesthetics) is a relatively recent sub-discipline of empirical aesthetics. Empirical aesthetics takes a scientific approach to the study of aesthetic perceptions of art, music, or any object that can give rise to aesthet ...
with his husband Bevil Conway, a neuroscientist and visual artist.


Nineteenth- and twentieth-century music history

Rehding has published numerous articles on nineteenth- and twentieth-century music, on such composers as
Ludwig van Beethoven Ludwig van Beethoven (baptised 17 December 177026 March 1827) was a German composer and pianist. Beethoven remains one of the most admired composers in the history of Western music; his works rank amongst the most performed of the classical ...
,
Richard Wagner Wilhelm Richard Wagner ( ; ; 22 May 181313 February 1883) was a German composer, theatre director, polemicist, and conductor who is chiefly known for his operas (or, as some of his mature works were later known, "music dramas"). Unlike most op ...
,
Franz Liszt Franz Liszt, in modern usage ''Liszt Ferenc'' . Liszt's Hungarian passport spelled his given name as "Ferencz". An orthographic reform of the Hungarian language in 1922 (which was 36 years after Liszt's death) changed the letter "cz" to simpl ...
,
Igor Stravinsky Igor Fyodorovich Stravinsky (6 April 1971) was a Russian composer, pianist and conductor, later of French (from 1934) and American (from 1945) citizenship. He is widely considered one of the most important and influential composers of the ...
and
Arnold Schoenberg Arnold Schoenberg or Schönberg (, ; ; 13 September 187413 July 1951) was an Austrian-American composer, music theorist, teacher, writer, and painter. He is widely considered one of the most influential composers of the 20th century. He was as ...
. His monograph ''Music and Monumentality'' was the first book-length exploration of this concept, exploring the imaginary connection between “big” sounds and ambitions of greatness in the music of nineteenth-century
Germany Germany,, officially the Federal Republic of Germany, is a country in Central Europe. It is the second most populous country in Europe after Russia, and the most populous member state of the European Union. Germany is situated betwe ...
. In a six vignettes, it approaches the “monumental” works of the German symphonic tradition between Beethoven and Bruckner, lodged between the aesthetics of the sublime and a nationally framed memory culture. The book has also been influential on the new field of
arrangement In music, an arrangement is a musical adaptation of an existing composition. Differences from the original composition may include reharmonization, melodic paraphrasing, orchestration, or formal development. Arranging differs from orches ...
studies. He is series editor (with David Irving) of the multi-volume Cultural History of Music for Bloomsbury.


Ecomusicology

Rehding may have inadvertently coined the term “ Ecomusicology” when he used this title for a review article published in 2002. Explorations of the concept of nature have been an important part of his work in the history of music theory. His more recent contributions to this field have focused increasingly on contemporary ecological concerns (apocalyptic thinking,
Anthropocene The Anthropocene ( ) is a proposed geological epoch dating from the commencement of significant human impact on Earth's geology and ecosystems, including, but not limited to, anthropogenic climate change. , neither the International Commissi ...
, the "
Long Now The Long Now Foundation, established in 1996, is an American non-profit organization based in San Francisco that seeks to start and promote a long-term cultural institution. It aims to provide a counterpoint to what it views as today's "faster ...
”). Rehding argues that music, with its flexible temporalities, has an important role to play in fostering thinking about the distant future, corresponding to one major strand of contemporary ecological thought. His contributions on long timespans and extreme slowness fall under the wider field of chronocriticism.


Select publications


Monographs

* ''Hugo Riemann and the Birth of Modern Musical Thought'' (2003) * ''Music and Monumentality: Commemoration and Wonderment in Nineteenth-Century Germany'' (2009) * ''Beethoven's Symphony no. 9'' (2017)


Edited volumes

* ''Music Theory and Natural Order from the Renaissance to the Early Twentieth Century'', with Suzannah Clark (2001) * ''The Oxford Handbook of Riemannian and Neo-Riemannian Music Theories'', with Edward Gollin (2011) * ''Music in Time: Phenomenology, Perception, Performance'', with Suzannah Clark (2016) * ''The Oxford Handbook of Critical Concepts in Music Theory'', with Steven Rings
online
print: 2019) * ''The Oxford Handbook of Timbre'', with Emily Dolan
online
print: 2020)


Articles

* “Towards a ‘Logic of Discontinuity’ in Stravinsky’s Symphonies of Wind Instruments,” ''Music Analysis'' 17/1 (1998): 32-61. * “Liszt und die Suche nach dem TrisZtan-Akkord,” ''Acta Musicologica'' 72/2 (2000): 169-188. * “The Quest for the Origins of Music circa 1900,” ''Journal of the American Musicological Society'' 53/2 (2000): 345-385. * “Trial Scenes at Nuremberg” ''Music Analysis'' 20/2 (2001): 239-267. * “Liszt’s Musical Monuments,” ''Nineteenth Century Music'' 26/1 (2002): 52-72. * “Eco-Musicology,” ''Journal of the Royal Musical Association'' 127/2 (2002): 332-47. * “Apologia for Erik,” ''Opera Quarterly'' Special Issue: Wagner's Flying Dutchman 21/3 (2005): 416-429. * “Wax Cylinder Revolutions,” ''Musical Quarterly'' 88/1 (2005): 123-160. * “Rousseau, Rameau and Enharmonic Furies in the French Enlightenment,” ''Journal of Music Theory'' 49/1 (2005): 141-180. * “On the Record,” Cambridge Opera Journal 18/1 (2006): 59-82. * “Moses’s Beginning,” ''Opera Quarterly'' Special Issue: Image and Idea in Schoenberg’s Moses und Aron 23/3 (2007): 395-417. * with John McKay, “Music Theory and Platonic Dialogues: A Response to Jay Kennedy,” ''Apeiron'' (2011): 359-375. * “Tonality as Rule and Repertoire; Or, Riemann’s Functions—Beethoven’s Function,” ''Music Theory Spectrum'' 29/2 (2011): 109-123. * "Ecomusicology between Apocalypse and Nostalgia: Some Critical Challenges,” ''Journal of the American Musicological Society'' Colloquy: Ecomusicology 64/2 (2011): 409-414. * with Bevil Conway,
Neuroaesthetics
The Trouble with Beauty” Public Library of Science Biology 11/3 (March 19, 2013). * “Music-Historical Egyptomania 1650-1950,” ''Journal of the History of Ideas'' 75/4 (2014): 545-580. * “Three Music-Theory Lessons,” Journal of the Royal Musical Association 141/2 (2016): 251-282. * “Instruments of Music Theory,

22/4 (December 2016). * “Discrete/Continuous: Media Theory after Kittler,” ''Journal of the American Musicological Society'' 73/1 (2017): 221-228. * “Opening the Music Box,” ''Journal of the Royal Musical Association'' 144/1 (2019): 205–221.


Book chapters

* “August Halm’s Two Cultures As Nature,” ''Music Theory and Natural Order'', eds. Clark and Rehding. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001, 142-160. * “Inventing Liszt’s life: early biography and autobiography,” ''Cambridge Companion to Liszt'', ed. Kenneth Hamilton. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005, 14-27. * “Wagner, Liszt, Berlioz, and the ‘New German School’,” ''National Spirit or European Ideal: Nineteenth Century Perceptions of the German Role in Europe'', ed. Mary Anne Perkins and Martin Liebscher (Stuyvesant, NY: Edwin Mellen Press, 2006), 159-187. * “Magic boxes and Volksempfänger: Radio music in the Weimar Republic,” ''Music, Theatre, and Politics in Germany 1850-1950'', ed. Nikolaus Bacht. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2006, 255-272. * “Europäische Musiktheorie und chinesische Musik 1800/1900,” in ''Musiktheorie im kulturellen Kontext: Proceedings of the 5th Meeting of the German Society for Music Theory'', eds.
Hanns-Werner Heister Hanns-Werner Heister (born 14 June 1946) is a German musicologist. Life and career Born in Plochingen, (Baden-Württemberg), Heister studied musicology, German literature and linguistics in Tübingen, Frankfurt a. M. and Berlin, received his do ...
, Wolfgang Hochstein, Jan Philipp Sprick. Berlin: Weidler, 2008, 303-323. * “LA-bécarre à l’allemande ou LA-dièse à la française ? Notes en bas de page sur Beethoven, Riemann et d’Indy,” in ''Pratiquer l’analyse musicale : une discipline musicologique et son histoire'', eds. Nicolas Donin and Rémy Campos. Geneva: Conservatoire de Genève, 2009, 301-321. * “Dualistic Forms,” in ''The Oxford Handbook of Riemannian and Neo-Riemannian Studies'', ed. Gollin and Rehding. New York: Oxford University Press, 2012, 218-245. * “Carl Dahlhaus zwischen Tonalität und tonality,” ''Carl Dahlhaus und die Musikwissenschaft'', ed. by
Hermann Danuser Hermann Danuser (born 3 October 1946) is a Swiss-German musicologist. Life Born in Frauenfeld, Danuser studied piano, oboe, musicology, philosophy and German language and literature at the Musikhochschule and the University of Zurich from 1965; ...
. Schliengen: Edition Argus, 2012, 321-334. * “Après une Lecture de Tannhaüser: Reflections on Liszt and Cultural Transfer,” in ''Liszt et la France'', eds. Nicolas Dufetel, Dana Gooley, Malou Haine, and Jonathan Kregor. Paris: Vrin, 2012, 79-91. * “Urklänge: The Search for the Origins of German Music (1910-1950),” in ''Germania Remembered'', eds. Nicola McLelland and Christina Lee Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2013, 231-250. * with Andrea F. Bohlman, “Doing the European Two-Step,” in ''Empire of Song: Europe and Nation in the Eurovision Song Contest'', ed. Dafni Tragaki. Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press, 2013, 281-298. * “Heldentaten der Musik: Die Eroica und die Prometheus-Musik,” in ''Beethoven-Handbuch'', eds.
Albrecht Riethmüller Albrecht Riethmüller (born 21 January 1947) is a German musicologist. Life Born in 1947 in Stuttgart, Riethmüller studied musicology, philosophy and modern German literature at the Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg, where he received his do ...
and
Rainer Cadenbach Rainer Cadenbach (1 July 1944 – 22 May 2008) was a German musicologist and University professor. Life Born in near Kassel, Cadenbach studierte German (with Benno von Wiese and Rudolf Schützeichel), philosophy (with Hans Wagner and Hariolf ...
. Laaber: Laaber Verlag, 2013, 1: 71-94. * “Of Sirens Old and New” in ''The Oxford Handbook of Mobile Music and Sound Studies'', eds. Sumanth Gupinath and Jason Stanyek. New York: Oxford University Press, 2014, 1: 77-107. * “The Discovery of Slowness in Music,” in ''Thresholds of Listening'', ed. Sander van Maas. New York: Fordham University Press, 2015, 206-225. *
Consonance and Dissonance
” in The Oxford Handbook of Critical Concepts in Music Theory, eds. Rehding and Rings. New York: Oxford University Press, 2019. * “Unsound Seeds,” in ''Nineteenth-Century Opera and the Scientific Imagination'', eds. David Trippett and Benjamin Walton. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019. *
Timbre/Techne
” in ''The Oxford Handbook of Timbre'', eds. Dolan and Rehding. New York: Oxford University Press, 2020.


References


External links



at Harvard University
Guggenheim Foundation Biography

Past Fellows
at Princeton Society of Fellows
15 Minutes with the Dent Medallist
(Interview with Alexander Rehding)
What the Controversial Changes at Harvard Mean for Music in the University
(Interview with Harvard Faculty Members)
Sounding China
Online catalog of Exhibition, organized with a group of Harvard graduate students in 2012
Hearing Modernity
Archive of 2013 Sawyer Seminar
Instruments of Music Theory
Pre-AMS Conference 2017 {{DEFAULTSORT:Rehding, Alexander Living people Radcliffe fellows Year of birth missing (living people) Alumni of Queens' College, Cambridge