“Music is natural law as related to the sense of hearing.”
Anton Webern (1883–1945) Austrian composer and conductor
The Path to the New Music
Quoted in Maus, Fred Everett (2004). "Sexual and Musical Categories", The Pleasure of Modernist Music, p. 158. ISBN 1580461433.
“Music is natural law as related to the sense of hearing.”
Anton Webern (1883–1945) Austrian composer and conductor
The Path to the New Music
Milton Babbitt (1916–2011) American composer
From Milton Babbitt, "The Structure and Function of Musical Theory", College Music Symposium, Vol. 5 (Fall 1965), pp. 49-60; reprinted in Perspectives on Contemporary Music Theory, ed. Benjamin Boretz and Edward T. Cone (New York: Norton, 1972), pp. 10-21, ISBN 0393005488, and in Milton Babbitt, The Collected Essays of Milton Babbitt, ed. Stephen Peles, with Stephen Dembski, Andrew Mead, and Joseph N. Straus (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2003), pp. 191-201, ISBN 0691089663.
Igor Stravinsky (1882–1971) Russian composer, pianist and conductor
Igor Stravinsky (1936). An Autobiography, p. 53-54.
1930s
“Music produces a kind of pleasure which human nature cannot do without.”
Confucius (-551–-479 BC) Chinese teacher, editor, politician, and philosopher
Source: The Book of Rites
Immanuel Kant (1724–1804) German philosopher
Kant's Inaugural Dissertation (1770), Section III On The Principles Of The Form Of The Sensible World
Jacob Bronowski (1908–1974) Polish-born British mathematician
The Origins of Knowledge and Imagination (1978)
“I would have been happier had he also found a series of intelligent answers”
Margaret Thatcher (1925–2013) British stateswoman and politician
Conservative Political Centre Lecture (11 October 1968) http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/101632 <br class="br">Backbench MP <br class="br">Context: One of the effects of the rapid spread of higher education has been to equip people to criticise and question almost everything. Some of them seem to have stopped there instead of going on to the next stage which is to arrive at new beliefs or to reaffirm old ones. You will perhaps remember seeing in the press the report that the student leader Daniel Cohn-Bendit has been awarded a degree on the result of his past work. His examiners said that he had posed a series of most intelligent questions. Significant? I would have been happier had he also found a series of intelligent answers.
Vangelis (1943) Greek composer of electronic, progressive, ambient, jazz, pop rock, and orchestral music
2001
Max Beckmann (1884–1950) German painter, draftsman, printmaker, sculptor and writer
Beckmann's lecture 'Drei Briefe an eine Malerin' ('Three letters to a Woman-painter'), New York and Boston, Spring 1948; as cited in Letters of the great artists – from Blake to Pollock, Richard Friedenthal, Thames and Hudson, London, 1963, p. 214
1940s