Music Performers' Lived Experiences

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classical performer experience narratives
concert
cross-genre collaboration
embodied musicianship
emotional labour in music
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interpretative phenomenological analysis
live performance
music performer
musicology
performance psychology
performer's experiences
performers
performing arts
phenomenology
qualitative music research

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032403724
  • Weight: 660g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jul 2025
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The two volumes on Music Performers’ Lived Experiences seeks to widen this research area through close investigations of a variety of rich, complex and nuanced experiences classical music performers have qua performers, as they interact with musical scores, instruments, performance traditions, other musicking individuals, wider artistic and cultural discourses, norms and beliefs.

The two volumes aim to “humanise” music performers and contribute towards shaping a more performer-centred discipline of Music Performance Studies. The first volume, Music Performers’ Lived Experiences: Theory, Method, Interpretation, brings together internationally renowned scholars, who capture and scrutinise, through a variety of methods, a wide range of experiences performers have—as well as the personally meaningful lived experience narratives performers construct—presenting vivid portraits of music performers as artists situated in unique socio-cultural, historical, embodied and discursive contexts. The topics discussed include the construction of the idea of “the composer” from lived experiences of performing, manifestations of wisdom in the ways performers make sense of their experiences, joys of sight-reading, performer agency, lived experience as the basis of performance analysis, emotional labour of working with controversial repertoire, performance anxiety dreams of music performers, experience of working across musical genres, the nature of intersubjective experiences in music-making, absorption, and subjective bodily sensations in performance.

Readers will come away from the book with fresh insights about and an enhanced understanding of the infinitely rich lifeworld of music performers.

Chapter 9 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF at http://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons (CC BY) 4.0 license.

Mine Doğantan-Dack is a musicologist and concert pianist. Mine has published many articles on the phenomenology of live performing, dynamics of chamber music performance, pianistic touch, methodology in artistic research, history of music theory, and several edited books including Recorded Music: Philosophical and Critical Reflections (2008), Artistic Practice as Research in Music (2015), Music and Sonic Art (2018), Rethinking the Musical Instrument (2022) and The Chamber Musician in the Twenty-First Century (2022). Mine performs as a soloist and chamber musician, and has given performances of most of the major piano concerti with various orchestras. She taught at the University of Oxford, and was Professor of Music Performance Studies at the University of Manchester. She currently teaches music performance studies at the Faculty of Music, University of Cambridge.