Rule and Improvisation. An Ontology of Music
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This dissertation argues (1) that musical improvisation is any performer’s real-time handling of that
excess of musical properties not encoded by any set of instructions, nor foreseeable by the performer
herself, that we find in any performance; (2) that, hence, every musical performance is improvisatory in
a lesser or greater degree; (3) that every performance stems from a (not necessarily textual) set of instructions,
as long as no musical occurrence takes place ex nihilo or in an alleged normative void; (4)
that there can be no musical work detached or independent from a performance, by virtue of what I’ve
called the minimum sensorial requirement; and (5) that a form of Carnapian deflationism is the best
ontological strategy to address mind-dependent, cultural entities such as musical works. As a consequence
of the above, (6) a musical work should be considered an unrepeatable, improvisatory and hybrid
entity, a physical/normative object (understood in a deflationary, non-realist fashion), the aggregation
of a set of instructions (a particular abstract artefact) and a performance (a concrete object).
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