Image 1


Department of Music
New York University, Faculty of Arts and Science

Home ·  Faculty & Students ·  Contacts



24 Waverly Place ·  Room 268 ·  New York, NY ·  10003 ·  Phone: 212.998.8300 ·  Fax 212.995.4147


About the Department
dfgdf
Department History
Undergraduate Program
Graduate Program
Composition and Theory
Ethnomusicology
Historical Musicology
The Center for Early Music
Facilities and Resources
Washington Square Contemporary Music Society












Michael Gallope
dfgdf

M.A., New York University, 2006; B.A., B.M., Oberlin College, 2003
Advanced Certificate, Poetics and Theory

2004-5 Andrew W. Mellon Fellowship in the Humanities

I am broadly interested in the intellectual history of music. My dissertation studies musical modernism as a movement inseparable from influential currents in German and French philosophy. Through the twin concepts of "technicity" (marking the ambiguity between technique and technology) and "transcendence" (a particularly modernist brand of utopian aesthetics), I analyze and compare the work of Arnold  Schoenberg, Charles Ives, Ernst Bloch, Theodor Adorno, and Vladimir Jankélévitch.

At Oberlin College, I received the John Elvin Piano Prize for my performance of Boulez's Première Sonate, performed and recorded (in Dolby 5.1) Stockhausen's Kontakte with percussionist Ross Karre, and premiered over 30 new compositions including the commission of a new piano quintet by Scottish composer, James Dillon. I maintain an active performing career in New York playing accordion in the alt-country band, Tatters & Rags, and synthesizer in the psychedelic band, Starring.

Selected publications:

Invited Review: À l'écoute by Jean-Luc Nancy, trans. Charlotte Mandell. Current Musicology 86, Fall 2008, pp.157-166.

"Is There a Deleuzian Musical Work?" Perspectives of New Music 46/2 (Summer 2008), pp. 93-129.
 
"Between the Sonorous Bloc and the Refrain: Problems in Deleuze's Philosophy of Music," in
Radical Difference: Deleuzian Perspectives on the Theory and Philosophy of Music, ed. Brian Hulse and Nick Nesbitt (Forthcoming, Ashgate Press).

"Technics, Consciousness, and the Impossible Musical Object" in
Music and Consciousness, ed. Eric Clarke and David Clarke (Forthcoming, Oxford Unviersity Press).

"Sacred Music You Can't Consume" (February 2009)








All contents copyright
@ New York University.
All rights reserved.