Is Music a Language?—part 5
With
this in mind one can more easily come to the hypothesis that the music part of
music is either more valuable or more dangerous to the whole-life of the
individual who is encountering it in direct relationship to that person’s
understanding of the music genre being listened to or performed. So, the more understanding one receives from
the music part of the music, the more effect the encounter with the music will
have on the individual.
Earlier
I made reference to music as a metalanguage. (This consideration of what music “is” is,
like the other categorizations, not without complication,) There are several definitions of metalanguage
one of them is that it is any symbolic system used to discuss,
describe, or analyze another language or symbolic system. Viewing the formal
properties of music as metalanguage allows one to consider it to be another
“language” that is, if you please, “meta” or self-referential in the aspect
that the way the building blocks of music are artistically arranged
communicates meaning and that this meaning can more or less effectively become
“symbols” that are capable of, as Bloomberg would perhaps say, “decode” information.
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