Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts

December 19, 2017

A Music Prof Conducts a Tour Through the Themes of Star Wars @fmlehman @chronicle

Frank Lehman, assistant professor of music, Tufts University, has studied the music of Star Wars, composed by John Williams, and has cataloged them for us nicely here. He's an expert, so there's a lot to digest, both in his catalog and in his interview with the Chronicle of Higher Education.

When I first saw Star Wars and heard that opening theme, it brought me back to Brahms' Second Piano Concerto, with that horn solo, the rich interplay between the piano (hero?) and the orchestra. Williams' lush melodies affect me the way that Brahms does. But maybe that's just me.

January 12, 2007

Long on Law and Music Lyrics

Alex B. Long (Oklahoma City University School of Law) has posted [Insert Song Lyrics Here]: The Uses and Misuses of Popular Music Lyrics In Legal Writing, forthcoming 64 Wash. & Lee L. Rev. (2007) on SSRN. From the abstract:
Legal writers frequently utilize the lyrics of popular music artists to help advance a particular theme or argument in legal writing. And if the music we listen to says something about us as individuals, then the music we, the legal profession as a whole, write about may something about who we are as a profession. A study of citations to popular artists in law journals reveals that, not surprisingly, Bob Dylan is the most popular artist in legal scholarship. The list of names of the other artists rounding out the Top Ten essentially reads like a Who's Who of baby boomer favorites. Often, attorneys use the lyrics of popular music in fairly predictable ways in their writing, sometimes with adverse impact on the persuasiveness of the argument they are advancing. However, if one digs deeper, one can find numerous instances in which legal writers incorporate the lyrics of popular music into their writing in more creative ways.

December 8, 2006

The Music of Various Spheres

Ian Gallacher, Syracuse University College of Law, has published "Conducting the Constitution: Justice Scalia, Textualism, and the Eroica Symphony." Here is the abstract.
This article examines the three principle Constitutional interpretative approaches and compares them to similar interpretative doctrines used by musicians. In particular, it examines the theoretical underpinnings of Justice Scalia's "textualist" philosophy by trying to predict what results would obtain from application of that philosophy to a performance of the first movement of Beethoven's "Eroica" symphony.

The article does not declare the foundation of a new genre of legal hermeneutics, nor does it seek to announce a comprehensive interpretative framework that can solve problems of Constitutional or statutory interpretation. Rather, the article explores some fundamental principles of legal textual interpretation while, at the same time, avoiding the aggressive rhetoric and contentious social issues that can obscure the debate over textualism, the viability of a "Living Constitution" and the use of extra-textual information to aid in determining textual meaning.
Download the entire paper from SSRN here.