COOK-EVERIST-Rethinking Music (Dragged)
COOK-EVERIST-Rethinking Music (Dragged)
COOK-EVERIST-Rethinking Music (Dragged)
William Weber
1
Jacques Chailley, 40,000 Years of Music: Man in Search ofMusic, trans. Rollo Myers (London, 1964); Percy Young,
' "Ancient" Music in Eighteenth-Century England', Music & Letters, 60 (19 79), 401-15; H. Diack Johnstone, 'The
Genesis o f Boyce's Cathedral Music', Music & Letters, 56 ( 19 75 ), 2 6-40; Christoph Helmut Mahling, 'Zum "Musik-
betrieb" Berlins und seinen Institutionen in der ersten Hãlfte des 19. Jht:s.', and Klaus Kroplinger, 'Klassik-Reception
in Berlin ( 1800-30)', both in Carl Dahlhaus (ed. ), Studien zur Musikgeschichte Berlins im frühen 19. Jht. (Regensburg,
1980), 22-102, 301-80 resp.; Walter Wiora (ed.), Die Ausbreitung des Historismus über die Musik (Regensburg,
1969); Erich Reimer, 'Repertoirebildung und Kanonisierung: Zur Vorgeschichte des Klassikbegri!Tes, 1800-35',
Archiv für Musikwissenscha.ft, 43 (1986), 241-60; Herbert Schneider, Rezeption der Opern Lullys im Frankreich des
Ancien Régime (Tutzing, 1982); J. PeterBurl<holder, 'Museum Pieces: The Historieis! Mainstream in Music of the Last
Hundred Years', Journal of Musicology, 2 (1983), 115-34, and 'The Twentieth Century and the Orchestra as
Museum', in Joan Peyser (ed.), The Orchestra: Origins and Transformations (New York, 1986), 409-34; Joseph
Horowitz, Understanding Toscanini (New York, 1986); Lawrence Levine, Highbrow!Lowbrow: The Emergence of Cultural
Hierarchy in America (Cambridge, Mass., 1988). My writings on the problem include The Rise of Musical Classics in
The History of Musical Canon 337
since the extensive research of the last several decades has, along the way,
dredged up important pieces of information that pertain to it-repertories, aca-
demic practices, eulogies to dead composers, and so on.
The problem of tracing the origins and development of a musical canon
presents a challenging agenda of research for music historians. We need to re-
establish systematically what kinds of old works remained in repertories,
libraries, editions, and anthologies, how they acquired certain kinds of author-
ity in musicallife, and what social and cultural roles they played within society
as a whole. This should be done not for individual composers-the crutch of tra-
ditional musicology-but rather by studying collections separately, as idiosyn-
cratic entities, and then together, as a complete musical context in a particular
period. This would involve not only obtaining much more extensive information
about repertories but, even more important, learning how to interpret such
materials-tasks that have rarely been attempted as yet.
One of the hazards of such work is that the words 'canon', 'classic', and 'mas-
terpiece' slip much too easily from the tongue. The notion of the 'great composer'
is so engrained in modern musical culture that we use the terms instinctively for
any period, essentially in ahistorical terms. By smuggling them back into the
past, we blind ourselves to the particular ways in which people respected either
living or dead musicians for their work. In 1641 John Barnard, minor canon at
St Paul's Cathedral, spoke of 'master-peeces' in the preface to his collection of
English church music; but he meant something quite specific and identifiable:
pieces by master composers of the Chapel Royal. He did not bring to the term the
rich ideological construction that modern musical culture has built upon it. 4
Thus, instead of declaring perforce that one piece or another was a classic, we
need to look carefully in to the contexto f its reception and perpetuation; we need
to define the terms-musical, social, ideological, and semiological-in which the
society considered musical works part of a canonic tradition.
Modern musical culture, let us remember, gets along just fine by calling its
great works 'classical music', and one can only wonder whether the fancy new
term 'canon' is necessary. There is value in bringing it into use, however, in part
beca use literary scholars have developed a highly productive field around it, but
most of ali because it suggests the complete construct of activities, values, and
authority that surrounded the music. If 'classics' are individual works deemed
great, 'canon' is the framework that supports their identification in criticai and
ideological terms.
The term 'canon' potentially has very broad meanings: it can refer to anything
deemed essential to a society or to one of its parts in establishing order and dis-
cipline and in measuring worth. As used in theology, law, and the arts. it denotes
both broad assumptions and specific practices, both the nature of dogma and the
way its application is to be judged. As Katherine Bergeron has suggested, in
4
John Barnard. The First Book of Selected Church Musick (London. 1641). l.
The History of Musical Canon 339
music the term applies not only to the lists of great composers, but also to the
most basic precepts of how music functions as a discipline, dictating how 'the
individual within a field learns, by intemalizing such standards, how not to
transgess'. 5 We shall see how the idea of great composers and great works in
fact grew directly out of the traditions that govemed the craft of music-most
important of ali, sacred polyphony.
around the music of Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, and Brahms made the process
of emulation even more common and explicit than before; even the less tutored
public became somewhat aware of the sources from which composers derived
their models. Moreover, the rediscovery of works from the Middle Ages and
the Renaissance opened up vast new historical reference-points and stylistic
possibilities.
The final major kind of canon, the performing canon, involves the presenta-
tion of old works organized as repertories and defined as sources of authority
with regard to musical taste. I would argue that performance is ultimately the
most significant and criticai aspect of musical canon. While editions and
anthologies figured significantly within the pedagogical and criticai aspects
of this problem, what emerged as the core of canonicity in musical life,
beginning in the eighteenth century, was the public rendition of selected
works. 7 Celebration of the canon has been the focus of its role in musical
culture; although some canonic works are not performed, they have for the
most part been part of specialized pedagogical canons. We shall see that a
performing canon is more than just a repertory; it is also a criticai and
ideological force.
Thus a performing canon is a much broader phenomenon than a pedagogical
canon. It is usually more widely known, is based chiefly in public contexts, and
has a more prominent ideological framework. The two kinds of canon co-
exist and interact extensively-they are ultimately interdependent-but in the
modem period it has been the performance of great works that has been centre
stage.
'Until the beginning of the nineteenth century ... ali music of a previous age
was a dead letter, and of no interest to anyone,' wrote Jacques Chailley in 1964. 8
Let us be wary of such sweeping statements. Music historians have none the less
assumed that a canon-loosely defined-first arose in Germany and Austria
under the influence of the Romantic movement, revolving around reverence
for the canonic trinity of Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven. The intersection of
Romantic philosophy with the cults of these composers has tended to encourage
this assumption. But the wealth of archival work on the preceding three
centuries clone in the last severa} decades has unearthed information that
raises serious questions about such a dating. As we shall see, there were
important antecedents to the canon practised in the previous 300 years that
must be defined in some terms as canonic. I would argue that a pedagogical
canon arose in the sixteenth century, and that a performing canon emerged
in England in the course of the eighteenth century, and to a more limited extent
in France as well.
I do not have the space in which to sort out these big problems here. But let
7
On the role of anthologies. see Citron. Gender. 32-3.
' Chailley, 40.000 Years of Music, I 7. He. of course. was mostly concerned with interest in medieval music, which
was indeed a rarity until well into the nineteenth century.
The History of Musical Canon 341
The idea of a musical classic emerged from respect for the master composer, for
the mastery of his craft, his ability to compose artfully, especially in learned
idioms. The roots of musical canon in craft traditions bound it intimately to the
polyphonic tradition. If one can speak of any distinctly musical principie lying
behind the authority of musical canon in the last four centuries, it has been the
desire to maintain respect for the discipline of contrapuntal technique. Thus have
the models of Palestrina, Corelli, J. S. Bach, Mozart, Brahms, Schoenberg, and
Carter been invoked against intellectually less ambitious composers in succeed-
ing generations. This does not mean that canon is by definition only very learned
polyphony; rather, it brings to bear upon both composition and taste the
342 Wllliam Weber
necessity for certain elements of rigour in voice-leading and textures. In fact, the
learned tradition has interacted closely with more popular musical genres in
productive ways in many periods, offering testimony to its adaptability, and estab-
lishing canonic models in the process. C. P. E. Bach idealized his father, Iwhile
adapting the style galant to more polyphonic purposes; Liszt paid tribute to
Beethoven, while turning early nineteenth-century instrumental virtuosity to
more complex purposes; and progressive rock composers such as Brian Eno and
Frank Zappa drew upon the classics of the avant-garde in trying to raise the levei
of taste in their field. In ali these cases one can find a creative tension between the
more and the less learned kinds of tastes, mediated by canonic models.
The notions of the master composer and the 'masterpiece' originally had
canonic implications of a disciplinary, but not a historical, nature. What hap-
pened in the sixteenth and the seventeenth centuries was that this tradition
extended itself in the longer awareness of master composers-especially that of
Palestrina-in a pedagogical canon. Then, during the eighteenth century, the
tradition of craft became much more closely allied with performing canons-in
England for Corelli, Purcell, and Handel, and in France for Lully and Rameau.
Corelli's concertos were both studied and performed, as were Lully's operas and
trios transcribed from his arias. During the nineteenth century the value of craft
remained a powerful force in the writings of Romantic musical thinkers. Robert
Schumann played the pedagogue to younger composers in invoking canonic
models: 'There is always a difference between master and disciple. The quickly
tossed-off pianoforte sonatas of Beethoven, and still more those of Mozart, in
their heavenly grace, exhibit the same degree of mastery that do their deeper
revelations.' 9
When, in the course of the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, these
notions took on canonic implications, they provided an important line of conti-
nuity between the epochs before and after the rise of performing canons, and
also between the musical past and present generally. That may be why, even
though the rise of musical classics transformed musical taste so profoundly
during the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, none the less there was
remarkably little sense of a major contradiction between new music and old in
regard to musical discipline until militant avant-garde groups arose in the late
nineteenth century, and even then they did not deny the classics categorically.
The notion of craft was inclusive rather than exclusive: it gathered together a
tradition of defining what was often called the 'perfection' of music, whether it
be new or old. This also meant that the emerging canon did not go very far back:
prior to the middle of the nineteenth century it was unusual to find even printed
reference to a composer active before Palestrina or Tallis, much less a perfor-
mance of a work of such antiquity. The traditions that undergirded the conti-
nuity between old and new repertories could not absorb works in unusually old
or different styles, at least until canonic repertories and authority became so
9
Robert Schumann, Of Music and Musicians, trans. Paul Rosenfeld (New York, 1946), 74.
The History of Musical Canon 343
firmly established by the late nineteenth century that more far-flung specialities
could appear.
For the same reason, the application of musical craft to canon became focused
as much upon collegial notions of great composers who shared common train-
ing and musical excellence as on cults of individual composers. The composers
whose works remained in performance in eighteenth-century France and
England carne in large part from the royal courts, and the growing profession-
alism and pride of place among these musicians was one of the foundations of
early tendencies toward canon. By the same token, the idea of a common canon
based in orchestral and chamber-music concerts underlay the reverence for
Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven, and then, by extension, for Schubert, Schu-
mann, and Brahms. While individual cults emerged around some key figures-
Handel. Beethoven, and Wagner perhaps most prominently of all-they none
the less emerged within a strong sense of collegial musical standards. We shall
see, however, that individual works. or groups of works. entered repertories
based upon quite individual performing traditions.
Marcia Citron has discussed the role of craft in canon in an interesting
way, showing how the professionalism of musicians-a set of self-imposed
expectations--determined what kinds of music men and women wrote, and
therefore whose music became canonic. 10 Her argument is convincing that, until
recently, with some important exceptions, women composers have tended to
write in the intellectually less ambitious and less canonically oriented genres.
The problem is pertinent as well to composers in popular musicallife, film music
particularly.
But however central the tradition of the musical craft was to the evolution of
canon, it possessed limited ability to engage the larger society. In the early eight-
eenth century, neither preserving old scores, emulating respected works. nor
learning to compose in antiquated styles meant much to people interested in
hearing or playing works written in the manner of their day. While by 1850
some concert-goers had learned about the emula tive exchanges among the clas-
sical composers. they remained a distinct minority compared with those who
flocked to keep hearing The Barber of Seville or The Messiah. Musical craft was an
inward-looking, ultimately professional discipline, and it could not stand alone
in the establishment of a powerful canon.
Repertory
The second of our principies of musical canon, repertory, has not yet been the
subject of much extensive study or analysis.U Music historians have only just
° Citron, Gender, esp. ch. 3: 'Professionalism', pp. 80-119.
1
11
K. M. Mueller, 2 7 Major American Symphony Orchestras: A History and Analysis of their Repertoires, Seasons
1842--43 through 1969-70 (Bloomington, Ind., 1973); R. L. and N. W. Weaver, A Chronology of Music in the
F1orentine Theater, 1590-1750 (Detroit, 1978); Weber, Rise of Musical CU.ssics, ch. 6: 'Repertory of the Concert
of Antient Music'.
344 Wdliam Weber
13
Weber. Rise of Musical Classics, 23-36, 46-7, 52-3, 56-7, 168-70. 194-7.
14
In the article 'Classical' in Stanley Sadie (ed.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (Lúndon, 1980),
iv. 449-51, e.g., Daniel Heartz restricts his discussion to Uterary ideas of the classic and classicism; he never dis-
cusses the canonic uses of the word that have been so baSic to the vocabulary of musical Ufe in the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries.
346 W!lliam Weber
tradition. When a work was revived after a long time, it was usually because it
was related to a genre or a composer for which there was an active tradition.
and its performance therefore did not really constitute a revival. For example, the
Concert of Antient Music performed a few of the works which Handel composed
in Italy just after the turn of the eighteenth century-the Dixit Dominus of 1707,
for example, performed in 1785-that had not been performed since that time,
but the focus of the programmes on Handel made this no great novelty.
One cannot over-emphasize the diversity of canonic repertories. Different
kinds of concerts offered quite different components and had quite different
canonic implications. For example, the Academy of Ancient Music and the
Concert of Antient Music might have similar names and be without parallel
anywhere else in Europe during the 1780s or 1790s, but they offered remarkably
different programmes. The Academy had a much less esoteric repertory than
the Antient Concert; it served up sentimental ballads, and offered only the
best-known Elizabeth madrigals or late Baroque opera arias, works of the sort
that the other series provided in great variety. 15 Likewise, in the second half of the
nineteenth century, the Conservatoire Orchestra of Paris served as a musical
museum or, as some contemporaries described it, a temple; it performed few
works by living composers and no Italian opera, featured chorai sacred music,
and in general reflected a far more rigid sense of canon than any of the similar
orchestral societies in the major capital cities. The Philharmonic Society
of London, by contrast, built a canon of bel canto opera selections, alongside
symphonies of Beethoven and opera selections by Cherubini and Rossini. 16
Thus a repertory of old works was not a unity; it was the sum of component
parts that served different musical tastes and constituencies. In the 1790s the
Concert of Antient Music looked to its connoisseurs with arias from little-known
operas of Handel, and kept its less learned clientele (people there to see the royal
family) happy with resounding, militaristic choruses from Judas Maccabaeus. In
the 1850s the Gewandhaus Orchestra of Leipzig likewise served its intellectual
clients an impressively varied array of symphonies by Haydn, Mozart, and
Beethoven, together with arias by Gluck and Cherubini, but tried to draw crowds
with recent violin concertos and popular selections from Mozart and Weber
operas. 17
15
Programmes of the Antient Concertare to be found in the holdings of a variety of libraries of The Words of the
Music Performed at the Concert of Antient Music for each season; those of the Academy for the 1 790s are in the col-
lection of Mr Christopher Hogwood.
16
Arthur Dandelot, La Société des concerts du Conservatoire de 1828 à 1897 (Paris, 1898); Edouard Deldevez, La
Société des concerts du Conservatoire de Musique, 1860 à 1885 (Paris, 1887); Myles Birket Foster, The History of the
Philharmonic Society of London, 1813-1912 (London, 1912 ); George Hogarth, The History of the Philharmonic Society
of London from its Foundation, 1813, to its Fifiieth Year, 1862 (London, 1862); Richard von Perger and Robert
Hirschfeld, Geschichte der k. k. Gesellschaft der Musiclifreunde in Wien (Vienna, 1912). On the policies of the Conser-
vatoire, see esp. Deldevez, La Société, 385.
17
At the Gewandhaus in Leipzig, between 1781 and 1881, 612 opera selections were performed, 92 opera over-
tures, but only 221 symphonies (see Albert Doerffel, Geschichte der Gewandhausconcerte zu Leipzig (2 vols., Leipzig,
1881-4) ).
The History of Musical Canon 347
There was such great variety in the old works performed in different places
that one should not think of 'canon' as a universally authorized play-list. lt is
usually best to think of a period as possessing a set of interlocking canons, rather
than a single one; it is even more important to avoid speaking of the canon. The
ideological burden of the classical music tradition-its effort to enforce its
authority-makes one think that there was a single, identifiable list; but upon
closer inspection we find a great variety of practices at any one time in different
contexts, affected by performing resources, institutional characteristics, and
social traditions.
On the broadest plane, the opera differed fundamentally from the concert in
the evolution of canon. Only in a few instances did clearly defined repertories of
full-length operas remain on-stage for long periods of time before the middle of
the nineteenth century. A few works of the late eighteenth century-Gluck's
most of all-remained on-stage in Paris until the 1820s, but not after that.
Several of Mozart's operas persisted, as did Fidelio and Der Freischütz in places,
but in most places a diversified repertory of German opera had to wait for the
leadership of Wagnerian producers later in the century. Probably the largest
early operatic repertory to become established was that of works by Rossini,
Donizetti, and Bellini that remained in use in many places (centrally in the
Théâtre Italien in Paris, for example). 18 Yet it was probably not until the early
twentieth century that opera repertories consisted primarily of works by dead
composers, as had come about in orchestral and chamber-music concerts by the
1860s.
Repertories of operatic excerpts were far more widespread than complete
works: that is where opera persisted most significantly before 1900. Throughout
the nineteenth century it was the practice for most orchestral concerts (by 'sym-
phony' orchestras, as it was put even then) to offer opera arias or major scenes
or acts; one suspects that such pieces were a major drawing-card. But operatic
excerpts were canonized very differently from symphonies or concertos-they
were viewed more in popular than in learned terms, with respect but not spiri-
tual awe directed at the composers. While the busts of Bellini and Donizetti were
often enshrined on the walls of concert-halls along with those of Haydn and
Beethoven by the 18 70s, they represented quite different and separate canonic
traditions. Mozart and Weber related more closely to this canon than to that of
instrumental music, since they were known more for their operas than for their
instrumental works.
Works were perceived in canonic terms in large part by the roles they played
in repertories and in programmes, and we need therefore to look more closely at
the ways by which these frameworks were constructed. The most basic unit of
analysis here is the genre: programmes were organized in terms of genre, usually
18
Frédérique Patureau demonstrates an emerging operatic canon in Le Palais Garnier dans la société parisienm.
1875--1914 (tiêge, 1991). Information on opera repertories can be found in concise form in such worl<s as Albert
de Lasalle and Ernst Thorirau, La Musique à Paris (Paris, 1863).
348 William Weber
19
Jeffrey Kallberg, 'The Rhetoric of Gem-e: Chopin's Nocturne in G Minor', 19th-Century Music, 11 (1988),
238-61.
20
Anthony Cummings, 'Toward an Interpretation of the Sixteenth-Century Motel', ]AMS 34 (1981), 43-59;
Jeffrey Dean, 'The Repertory of the CappeUa Guilia in the 1560s', ]AMS 41 (1988), 465-90; letter to ]AMS 42
(1989), 671-2.
21
Fragmentary coUections of the programmes of the Academy in its early period are to be found in the I.eeds
Public Library, lhe Bibliotheque Nationale, and the British Library.
22
Weber, Rise of Musical Classics, 178, 184-5; 1\m.anuele D'Astorga', in New Grove, i. 663-4.
The History of Musical Canon 349
positions on programmes had belittling social implications, but one finds sym-
phonies in such spots for much of the nineteenth century. In 1807 the Gewand-
haus Orchestra made a drastic break with convention-the contract-when it
played Beethoven's 'Eroica' Symphony just after intermission, following it by a
scene from a popular opera, and subsequently gave a kind of canonic status to
this and a few other works that were played in this spot (the oratorios of Handel
and Haydn anda symphony by Peter Winter especially). 23 That symphonies none
the less usually remained in their usual spot suggests a limitation to the social
'autonomy' which the genre is often said to have achieved in the Romantic
period. Even atas serious an institution as the Paris Conservatoire, Mozart's sym-
phonies remained mainly at the start or the end, except for a few times during
the 1850s. 24
Criticism
The third principie of canon, criticism, was distinguished from repertory in fun-
damental fashion by Joseph Kerman, in his pioneering article of 1983. He
argued that while repertory is limited to the performance of old works, canon
defines the works intellectually and from a criticai perspective: 'A canon is an
idea: a repertory is a program of action.' 25 Thus, simply performing works does
not in and of itself establish them as part of a canon; the musical culture has to
assert that such an authority exists, and define it at least to some degree in sys-
tematic fashion.
But Kerman pressed the distinction too far: 'Repertories are determined by per-
formers, and canons by critics.' 26 The statement is simplistic: we cannot write off
musicians as shapers of the canon. Kerman does not take seriously enough the
role played by the tradition of craft in the criticai process, a set of principies and
standards-indeed, contracts with the public-in which musicians played a
major role. Canonization was more than a literary process, a separating-out of
musical wheat from chaff in the intellectuals' favourite sheets. It was influenced
by a complex variety of social forces, ideologies, and rituais that can often be
quite difficult to sort out. In some instances the literati simply gave their intel-
lectual blessing to works that were already revered for different reasons-Leigh
Hunt or Stendhal, for example, writing on Rossini in the 1820s, or French roy-
alists who made Rameau their hero long after the Parisian public had made his
music their own. This problem aside, Kerman's distinction is an essential tool
for historical study of musical canon. We need to use it to enquire how in the
23
The scene that concluded the programme was :Ali padre mio', from Franc Federici's popular opera Zaira.
Programmes of the Gewandhaus Concerts, 29 jan., 5 Feb. 1807, Museum of the City of Leipzig.
24
See Dandelot, La Sociéti des concerts . .. de 1828 à 1897, and Deldevez, La Sociéti . .. 1860 à 1885.
25
)oseph Kennan, )\ Few Canonic Variations', Canons, 177.
26
lbid. 182. See as well bis Contemplating Music (Cambridge, Mass., 1984), 7ü-2. 207,215, and Citron, Gender,
16-17.
350 Wllliam Weber
eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries the performance of old works took
those crucial steps first from canonic learning to performing repertory, and then
to a complete, criticai. ideological canon.
Kerman warns us against using 'criticism' too narrowly, focused too much
upon reviewing and not enough upon a discourse, the broadly defined process
by which participants in musicallife consider works of music. What is essential
is that the product of canonization is the bestowal of authority upon certain
pieces of music. If repertory constitutes the framework of canon, the criticai dis-
course empowers it, endowing old works with authority over musical composi-
tion and taste. This can be clone in oral justas much as in written form; the point
is that it must be stated publidy and categorically, and reinforced by images and
rituais. Only if canonic authority is thus articulated and reinforced will it estab-
lish the power that it requires to act as a central determinant of musical culture.
This authority must reach out over musicallife as a whole; it cannot be simply
the principies of the musically learned. That is why I argue that there was a ped-
agogical. rather than a performing, canon in the sixteenth and the seventeenth
centuries.
We must never forget that many factors other than criticism carne into play
in the establishment of works in repertories. For example, Handel's Occasíonal
Oratorio hung on in large part because it was written to celebrate the govern-
ment's victory over the Jacobites in 1745; critics of the second half of the eigh-
teenth century saw it as an inferior work, and much preferred the pieces he
wrote in Italy, few of which stayed in the repertory. 27 The length and instru-
mentation of a piece often played significant roles in whether it lasted or not;
Purcell's Te Deum and Jubílate may very well have become standard repertory at
musical festivais because it was short but imposing and demanded no special
players. 28
The relationship between music history and music criticism is another prob-
lematic subject. The writing of history about great works of art is by no means
essential to canon. Prior to the late eighteenth century, canonic traditions in the
arts generally were essentially ahistorical, for the great works of poetry and
sculpture were regarded as timeless, and were not studied in historical context-
indeed, to doso would have meant questioning their universality. Musical canon
emerged with dose links to music history because it appeared at a time when
such principies were weakening and when historical writing was becoming a
vogue in almost ali the arts. As I have argued elsewhere, musical canon arose in
the eighteenth century in part because the authority of what Frank Kermode
has called the 'metropolitan' canon in literature was breaking up. 29 Thus, much
of the leadership in establishing the canon carne from music historians such as
27
See Robert Price, 'Observations on the Music of George Frederick Handel', the concluding section of john
Mainwaring's Memoirs of the life of the late George Frederick Handel (London, 1760), 177-81 and n.
'' I owe the latter point to Donald J. Burrows.
29
Weber, 'Intellectual Origins'.
The History of Musical Canon 3 51
Charles Burney and François Fétis. But, as Carl Dahlhaus has argued, in the
nineteenth century the canon was essentially normative, not historical, and the
principie of historical accuracy was not a major determinant in public concert
life until the early music movement of the Iast several decades. 30 History served
more as a means than an end within the emerging canon. It emerged as an
unavoidable element in musical commentary, but ultimately in a subordinate
capacity, providing ammunition for fighting wars of taste and a rationale for
defining musical norms.
Dahlhaus goes too far, however, in saying that the writing of music history
arose after the components of the canon had been established, and that it there-
fore served to legitimate, rather than define, their authority. In Germany and
Italy quite impressive works-the history of opera written by Estaban de Arteaga
in the 1780s most strikingly of all 31-were written well before old works were
performed frequently in those countries. Music history had its own history; in
many respects it developed in its own terms, separate from canon, and accord-
ingly exerted influence upon the development of repertory. 32 It was Fétis, for
example, who, by virtue of his roles as both historiao and concert impresario,
brought music of the Renaissance and the Baroque into repertory and into
canon.
Ideology
30
Carl Dahlhaus. Foundations of Music History, trans. J. B. Robinson (Cambridge, 1983), 95-100.
31
Estaban de Arteaga, Le rivoluzioni de! Wltro musicale italiano dalla sua origine fino ai presente (3 vols., Bologna,
1783-8). It was published in translation in I.eipzig in 1789 by J. N. Forlrel, and in an abbreviated version, Les Révo-
lutions du théô.tre musical en Italie, in London in 1802.
32
For a broad treatment of early music histories, see Lawrence Lipking, The Ordering of the Arts in Eighteenth-
Century England (Princeton. 1970). For examples of this kind of journalistic history, see the Almanach musical
(1773-81), the European Magazine of the same period, and the major music journals of the early nineteenth
century-the Quarterly Music Magazine and Review, the Harmonicon, the Revue et gazette musicale, the Allgemeine
Musikzeitung, and the Allgemeine wiener Musikzeitung.
33
Foc discussion of ideology in music, see I.eonard B. Meyer, Style and Music: Theory, History and Ideology (Philadel-
phia, 1989), chs. 6-8.
352 W!lliam Weber
terms in which the classical music tradition has been defined on the most fun-
damental plane.
The ideology of the musical canon has had a moral dimension throughout its
history. It grew from a reaction against commercialism, against the development
of publishing and concert life as manipulative enterprises that were seen to
threaten standards of taste. A critique of the ways in which commerce was sup-
posedly degrading musical values-'musical idealism', as I have termed it 34-
appeared as far back as early eighteenth-century England, notably in Arthur
Bedford's book of 1711 The Great Abuse of Musick, and recurred in relatively
similar forms throughout the nineteenth century. It identified the canon as
morally and socially purifying, as a force for the good on the highest plane.
Because the great master-works were thought to stand above the money-making
side of musicallife, they could help society transcend commercial culture and
thereby regenerate musicallife.
The canon has been seen as a spiritual force in both sacred and secular terms.
Whereas religious idioms figured only secondarily in the canon of modern liter-
ature, music's roots in sacred polyphony pointed it in such a direction from the
start. Palestrina's sacred style was established as a pedagogical model, and the
music of the Elizabethan masters as a part of cathedral repertories. The perfor-
mance of Delalande's motets in the Concerts Spirituels, justifying musical enter-
tainment on holy days, brought the sacred canon into a secular context, and
thereby established one of the key traditions in modern concert life. The perfor-
mance of Handel's oratorios after his death had a similar impact, but yielded a
much more self-consciously spiritual ideology in a wide range of performing con-
texts. Romantic musical thinking then interpreted the primarily secular reper-
tory of the early nineteenth century in religious terms, and, one might say,
spiritualized it.
Notions of the canon as a moral anda spiritual force have been closely related
to one another, and together to the tradition of musical craft. The polyphonic
tradition and its diverse offshoots have been defined ideologically as the bulwark
of solid craftsmanship, good taste, and a lofty order of musical experience. We
likewise find these themes in Bedford's polemics against theatre songs and in the
attacks made against opera medleys during the 1840s by proponents of the •clas-
sical' repertory. Bedford pointed to Byrd's psalm settings as models whereby to
purify taste, and Viennese critics to Beethoven's symphonies and sacred works. 35
These ideological themes together built an authority for the canon that reached
out beyond the lirnited numbers of people active in learned musicallife, or indeed
in musical culture as a whole.
In the course of achieving this authority, canon naturally took on a civic role
within society. The rise of the public as a political force independent of the
34
Weber. 'Wagner, Wagneiism'.
35
William Weber, Music and the Middle Class (London, 19 7 5), ch. 4.
The History of Musical Canon 353
36
See William Weber, 'Learned and General Musical Taste in Eighteenth-Century France', Past and Present, 89
(1980), 58-85; Citron, Gemler, 178-80.
354 William Weber
may sound, a deconstructionist can ultimately keep the faith in the classical
music tradition. To maintain a balance between these two perspectives demands
that we integrate theory and empiricism, in order to avoid the blinding extrem-
ities found among some practitioners of each approach.