Searching The Inner Nature of Music and the Experience of Tone Matches
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- Title: Lecture: Inner Nature of Music: Cover Sheet
Matching lines:
- lectures appearing here were published in the German volume, Das
- Title: Lecture: Inner Nature of Music: Lecture II
Matching lines:
- music appears to be something quite special. Music has always
- as the world surrounding us that appears to us as reality. Once a
- appears.
- Title: Lecture: Inner Nature of Music: Lecture III
Matching lines:
- how, in the same way that a man's shadow appears on the wall, a
- Title: Lecture: Inner Nature of Music: Lecture IV
Matching lines:
- I pointed out that certain human functions appearing in early childhood
- world of the stars. Though it appears that I am speaking
- appearance. Our fantasy, which give rise to the artistic, is
- Title: Lecture: Inner Nature of Music: Lecture V
Matching lines:
- (trans. Gustav Cohen, Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merril, 1957), first appeared in
- octave appears. One cannot actually distinguish it any longer from
- octave appears in a musical composition, man will have a feeling that
- exist in the same way as elsewhere. Metabolic phenomena appear, but
- of the third. The difference between major and minor keys appears;
- one isolated tone. It would have appeared to him like a lone ghost
- major and minor third. This is something that appears between ages
- appear when man strikes outward with the musical element and the
- Title: Lecture: Inner Nature of Music: Lecture VI
Matching lines:
- appeared to man at first as imaginations. Musical instruments were
- appear in our tone eurythmy. You will also grasp something else. You
- and goes without saying — I find the element that appears as
- formerly. They are gone, they have disappeared from the ancient
- compositions, the piano seems to disappear in the room! One forgets
- Title: Lecture: Inner Nature of Music: Lecture VII
Matching lines:
- processes are incorporated that appear outwardly to man as natural
- formerly they were located behind the appearance of things; they
- had something to do with the appearance of the interval of the
- the third appeared in the musical element — both major and
- third and the appearance of major and minor keys, the musical
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