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Aristoxenus

Aristoxenus of Tarentum (Greek: Ἀριστόξενος ὁ Ταραντῖνος; born c. 375, fl. 335 BC) was a Greek Peripatetic philosopher, and a pupil of Aristotle. Most of his writings, which dealt with philosophy, ethics and music, have been lost, but one musical treatise, Elements of Harmony (Greek: Ἁρμονικὰ στοιχεῖα; Latin: Elementa harmonica), survives incomplete, as well as some fragments concerning rhythm and meter. The Elements is the chief source of our knowledge of ancient Greek music.[1]

A modern imagining of the appearance of Aristoxenus.

Life edit

Aristoxenus was born at Tarentum (in modern-day Apulia, southern Italy) in Magna Graecia, and was the son of a learned musician named Spintharus (otherwise Mnesias).[2] He learned music from his father, and having then been instructed by Lamprus of Erythrae and Xenophilus the Pythagorean, he finally became a pupil of Aristotle,[3] whom he appears to have rivaled in the variety of his studies. According to the Suda,[4] he heaped insults on Aristotle after his death, because Aristotle had designated Theophrastus as the next head of the Peripatetic school, a position which Aristoxenus himself had coveted having achieved great distinction as a pupil of Aristotle. This story is, however, contradicted by Aristocles, who asserts that he only ever mentioned Aristotle with the greatest respect. Nothing is known of his life after the time of Aristotle's departure, apart from a comment in Elementa Harmonica concerning his works.[5][6]

Overview of his works edit

His writings were said to have consisted of four hundred and fifty-three books,[4] and dealt with philosophy, ethics and music. Although his final years were in the Peripatetic school, and he hoped to succeed Aristotle on his death, Aristoxenus was strongly influenced by Pythagoreanism, and was only a follower of Aristotle in so far as Aristotle was a follower of Plato and Pythagoras. Thus, as Sophie Gibson tells us,[7] "the various philosophical influences" on Aristoxenus included growing up in the profoundly Pythagorean city of Taras (Tarentum), home also of the two Pythagoreans Archytas and Philolaus, and his father's (Pythagorean) musical background, which he inculcated into his son. Gibson tells us that, after the influence of his father:

The second important influence on Aristoxenos' development was Pythagoreanism. Born in Tarentum, the city in which both Archytas and Philolaos had lived, it can be seen that the extended period of time that Aristoxenus spent in a Pythagorean environment made an indelible impact on the subject matter of his writings. Such titles as "Pythagorou bios", "Peri Pythaorou kai ton guorimon autou" and "Peri tou Pythagorikou biou" indicate Aristoxenus' interest in the society. Furthermore, his works on education show evidence of Pythagorean influence, particularly in their tendency towards conservatism. Most importantly, speculation on the structure of music had its origin in a Pythagorean environment. Its focus was on the numerical relationship between notes and, at its furthest stretch, developed into a comparison between musical, mathematical and cosmological structures.[8]

However, Aristoxenus disagreed with earlier Pythagorean musical theory in several respects, building on their work with ideas of his own. The only work of his that has come down to us is the three books of the Elements of Harmony, an incomplete musical treatise. Aristoxenus' theory had an empirical tendency; in music he held that the notes of the scale are to be judged, not as earlier Pythagoreans had believed, by mathematical ratio, but by the ear.[9] Vitruvius in his De architectura[10] paraphrases the writings of Aristoxenus on music. His ideas were responded to and developed by some later theorists such as Archestratus, and his place in the methodological debate between rationalists and empiricists was commented upon by such writers as Ptolemais of Cyrene.

The Pythagorean theory that the soul is a 'harmony' of the four elements composing the body, and therefore mortal ("nothing at all," in the words of Cicero[11]), was ascribed to Aristoxenus (fr. 118–121 Wehrli) and Dicaearchus. This theory is comparable to the one offered by Simmias in Plato's Phaedo.

Elementa harmonica edit

In his Elements of Harmony (also Harmonics), Aristoxenus attempted a complete and systematic exposition of music. The first book contains an explanation of the genera of Greek music, and also of their species; this is followed by some general definitions of terms, particularly those of sound, interval, and system.[12] In the second book Aristoxenus divides music into seven parts, which he takes to be: the genera, intervals, sounds, systems, tones or modes, mutations, and melopoeia.[12] The remainder of the work is taken up with a discussion of the many parts of music according to the order which he had himself prescribed.[12]

While it is often held among modern scholars that Aristoxenus rejected the opinion of the Pythagoreans that arithmetic rules were the ultimate judge of intervals and that in every system there must be found a mathematical coincidence before such a system can be said to be harmonic,[12] Aristoxenus made extensive use of arithmetic terminology, notably to define varieties of semitones and dieses in his descriptions of the various genera.[13]

In his second book he asserted that "by the hearing we judge of the magnitude of an interval, and by the understanding we consider its many powers."[12] And further he wrote, "that the nature of melody is best discovered by the perception of sense, and is retained by memory; and that there is no other way of arriving at the knowledge of music;" and though, he wrote, "others affirm that it is by the study of instruments that we attain this knowledge;" this, he wrote, is talking wildly, "for just as it is not necessary for him who writes an Iambic to attend to the arithmetical proportions of the feet of which it is composed, so it is not necessary for him who writes a Phrygian song to attend to the ratios of the sounds proper thereto."[12] However, this should not be construed as meaning that he postulated a simplistic system of harmony resembling that of modern twelve tone theory, and especially not an equally tempered system. As he urges us to consider, "(a)fter all, with which of the people who argue about the shades of the genera should one agree? Not everyone looks to the same division when tuning the chromatic or the enharmonic, so why should the note a ditone from mesé be called lichanos rather than a small amount higher?"[14]

It is sometimes claimed that the nature of Aristoxenus' scales and genera deviated sharply from his predecessors. That Aristoxenus used a model for creating scales based upon the notion of a topos, or range of pitch location,[15] is fact, however there is no reason to believe that he alone set this precedent, as he himself does not make this claim. Indeed, the idea of unfixed pitch locations that cover certain ranges, the limits of which may be defined by fixed points, is a notion that was popular until the modern fixation upon fixed pitch systems, as is indicated by Baroque theoretical systems of pitch and intonation. Another way of stating this, however perhaps less accurate, is that instead of using discrete ratios to place intervals, he used continuously variable quantities.

The postulation that this resulted in the structuring of his tetrachords and the resulting scales having 'other' qualities of consonance[16] is one that can only be accounted for by the recourse to often repeated inconsistencies amongst his interpreters and modern confirmation bias in favour of simplified twelve tone theories. Aristoxenus himself held that "(...) two things must not be overlooked: first, that many people have mistakenly supposed us to be saying that a tone can be divided into three equal parts in a melody. They made this mistake because they did not realise that it is one thing to employ the third part of a tone, and another to divide a tone into three parts and sing all three. Secondly we accept that from a purely abstract point of view there is no least interval."[17]

In book three Aristoxenus goes on to describe twenty eight laws of melodic succession, which are of great interest to those concerned with classical Greek melodic structure.[18]

On rhythmics and metrics edit

Part of the second book of a work on rhythmics and metrics, Elementa rhythmica, is preserved in medieval manuscript tradition.

Aristoxenus was also the author of a work On the Primary Duration (chronos).

A five-column fragment of a treatise on meter (P. Oxy. 9/2687) was published in Grenfell and Hunt's Oxyrhynchus Papyri, vol. 1 (1898) and is probably by Aristoxenus.

Other works edit

The edition of Wehrli presents the surviving evidence for works with the following titles (not including several fragments of uncertain origin):

  • Life of Pythagoras (Πυθαγόρου βίος): fr. 11 Wehrli
  • On Pythagoras and his pupils (Περὶ Πυθαγόρου καὶ τῶν γνωρίμων αὐτοῦ): fr. 14 Wehrli
  • On the Pythagorean life (Περὶ τοῦ Πυθαγορικοῦ βίου): fr. 31 Wehrli
  • Pythagorean maxims or Pythagorean negations (Πυθαγορικαὶ ἀποφάσεις): fr. 34 Wehrli
  • Educational customs or Rules of education (Παιδευτικοὶ νόμοι): fr. 42–43 Wehrli
  • Political laws (Πολιτικοὶ νόμοι): fr. 44–45 Wehrli
  • Mantinean character (Μαντινέων ἔθη): fr. 45, I, lines 1–9 Wehrli
  • Praise of Mantineans (Μαντινέων ἐγκώμιον): fr. 45, I, lines 10–12 Wehrli
  • Life of Archytas (Ἀρχύτα βίος): fr. 47–50 Wehrli
  • Life of Socrates (Σωκράτους βίος): fr. 54 Wehrli
  • Life of Plato (Πλάτωνος βίος): fr. 64 Wehrli
  • On tonoi (Περὶ τόνων): a brief quotation in Porphyry's on Ptolemy's Harmonics, p. 78 Düring (not edited by Wehrli)
  • On music (Περὶ μουσικῆς): fr. 80, 82, 89 Wehrli
  • On listening to music or Lecture course on music (Μουσικὴ ἀκρόασις): fr. 90 Wehrli
  • On Praxidamas (Πραξιδαμάντεια): fr. 91 Wehrli
  • On melodic composition or On music in lyric poetry (Περὶ μελοποιίας): fr. 93 Wehrli
  • On musical instruments (Περὶ ὀργάνων): fr. 94–95, 102 Wehrli
  • On aulos (Περὶ αὐλῶν): fr. 96 Wehrli
  • On auletes (Περὶ αὐλητῶν): fr. 100 Wehrli
  • On the boring of aulos (Περὶ αὐλῶν τρήσεως): fr. 101 Wehrli
  • On choruses (Περὶ χορῶν): fr. 103 Wehrli
  • On tragic dancing (Περὶ τραγικῆς ὀρχήσεως): fr. 104–106 Wehrli
  • Comparisons of dances (Συγκρίσεις): fr. 109 Wehrli
  • On tragic poets (Περὶ τραγῳδοποιῶν): fr. 113 Wehrli
  • Life of Telestes (Τελέστου βίος): fr. 117 Wehrli (according to whom this Telestes is the dithyrambic poet)
  • Miscellaneous table talk or Sympotic miscellany (Σύμμικτα συμποτικά): fr. 124 Wehrli
  • Notes or Memorabilia (Ὑπομνήματα), Historical notes (Ἱστορικὰ ὑπομνήματα), Brief notes (Κατὰ βραχὺ ὑπομνήματα), Miscellaneous notes (Σύμμικτα ὑπομνήματα), Random jottings (Τὰ σποράδην): fr. 128–132, 139 Wehrli

Editions and translations edit

  • Barker, Andrew (1989). Greek Musical Writings, vol. 2: Harmonic and Acoustic Theory (Cambridge), pp. 119–89, English translation with introduction and notes, ISBN 0-521-61697-2
  • Macran, Henry Stewart (1902). The Harmonics of Aristoxenus (Oxford), Greek text with English translation and notes (archive.org, Internet Archive)
  • Marquard, Paul (1868). Die harmonischen Fragmente des Aristoxenus (Berlin), Greek text with German translation and commentary (archive.org, Google Books)
  • Pearson, Lionel (1990). Aristoxenus: Elementa rhythmica. The fragment of Book II and the additional evidence for Aristoxenean rhythmic theory (Oxford ), Greek texts with introduction, translation, and commentary, ISBN 0-19-814051-7
  • Wehrli, Fritz (1967). Die Schule des Aristoteles, vol. 2: Aristoxenos, 2nd. ed. (Basel/Stuttgart), Greek text (excluding the harmonic fragments, rhythmic fragments, On the Primary Duration, and On tonoi: see p. 28) with commentary in German
  • Westphal, Rudolf (1883–1893). Aristoxenus von Tarent: Melik und Rhythmik des classischen Hellenenthums, 2 vols. (Leipzig) (vol. 1, vol. 2)
  • Westphal, Rudolf (1861). Die Fragmente und die Lehrsätze der griechischen Rhythmiker (Leipzig), pp. 26–41, Greek text of Elementa rhythmica and On the Primary Duration (Internet Archive)

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Aristoxenus of Tarentum" in Chambers's Encyclopædia. London: George Newnes, 1961, Vol. 1, p. 593.
  2. ^ Suda, Aristoxenos; Aelian, H. A. ii. 11.
  3. ^ Aulus Gellius, iv. 11; Cicero, Tusc. Disp. i. 18
  4. ^ a b Suda, Aristoxenos
  5. ^ Aristocles ap. Eusebius, Praeparatio Evangelica xv. 2
  6. ^ A. Barker (2007). The Science of Harmonics in Classical Greece. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1139468626. Retrieved 2015-05-03.(ed. "No more of his life-history is known....")
  7. ^ Gibson, Sophie (2005). Aristoxenus of Tarentum and the Birth of Musicology. New York: Routledge. ISBN 041597061X.[page needed]
  8. ^ Gibson, Sophie (2005). Aristoxenus of Tarentum and the Birth of Musicology. New York: Routledge. pp. 3–4. ISBN 041597061X.
  9. ^ Chisholm 1911.
  10. ^ Vitruvius, Book V Chapter IV
  11. ^ Cicero, Tusculanae Quaestiones 1.22.51, cf. 1.11.24
  12. ^ a b c d e f Sir John Hawkins, (1868), A General History of the Science and Practice of Music, Volume 1, pp. 66–7
  13. ^ Barker 1989, pp. 142–144.
  14. ^ Barker 1989, p. 163.
  15. ^ Barker 1989, p. 140.
  16. ^ John Chalmers, (1993) Divisions of the Tetrachord, Chapter 3, pp. 17–22. Frog Peak Music. ISBN 0-945996-04-7.
  17. ^ Barker 1989, p. 160.
  18. ^ Barker 1989, pp. 170–183.

References edit

Further reading edit

  • Bélis, Annie (1986). Aristoxène de Tarente et Aristote: le Traité d'harmonique. Paris, Klincksieck.
  • Barker, Andrew (1978). "Hoi Kaloumenoi harmonikoi: The Predecessors of Aristoxenus". Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society. 24: 1–21. doi:10.1017/s0068673500003990.
  • Barker, Andrew (1978). "Music and Perception: A Study in Aristoxenus". Journal of Hellenic Studies. 98: 9–16. doi:10.2307/630189. JSTOR 630189. S2CID 161552153.
  • Bélis, Annie (2001). "Aristoxenus". In Stanley Sadie; John Tyrrell (eds.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. Vol. 1. London: Macmillan Publishers. p. [page needed].{{cite encyclopedia}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Crocker, Richard (1966). "Aristoxenus and Greek Mathematics". In LaRue, Jan (ed.). Aspects of Medieval and Renaissance Music. New York: W. W. Norton and Co.
  • Henderson, Isabel (1957). "Ancient Greek Music". In Wellesz, Egon (ed.). Ancient and Oriental Music. The New Oxford History of Music. Vol. 1. London: Oxford University Press.
  • Huffman, Carl A. (ed.) (2011). Aristoxenus of Tarentum. Discussion. New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers. (RUSCH XVII).
  • Huffman, Carl (2012). Aristoxenus of Tarentum: Texts and Discussions. New Brunswick: Transactions Publications.
  • Levin, Flora (1972). "Synesis in Aristoxenian Theory". Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association. 103: 211–234. doi:10.2307/2935976. JSTOR 2935976.
  • Lippman, Edward (1964). Musical Thought in Ancient Greece. New York: Columbia University Press.
  • Rowell, Lewis (1979). "Aristoxenus on Rhythm". Journal of Music Theory. 23 (Spring): 63–79. doi:10.2307/843694. JSTOR 843694.
  • Winnington-Ingram, R. P. (1980). "Aristoxenus". In Stanley Sadie (ed.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. Vol. 1. London: Macmillan Publishers. p. [page needed].{{cite encyclopedia}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

External links edit

aristoxenus, other, people, named, disambiguation, tarentum, greek, Ἀριστόξενος, Ταραντῖνος, born, greek, peripatetic, philosopher, pupil, aristotle, most, writings, which, dealt, with, philosophy, ethics, music, have, been, lost, musical, treatise, elements, . For other people named Aristoxenus see Aristoxenus disambiguation Aristoxenus of Tarentum Greek Ἀristo3enos ὁ Tarantῖnos born c 375 fl 335 BC was a Greek Peripatetic philosopher and a pupil of Aristotle Most of his writings which dealt with philosophy ethics and music have been lost but one musical treatise Elements of Harmony Greek Ἁrmonikὰ stoixeῖa Latin Elementa harmonica survives incomplete as well as some fragments concerning rhythm and meter The Elements is the chief source of our knowledge of ancient Greek music 1 A modern imagining of the appearance of Aristoxenus Contents 1 Life 2 Overview of his works 3 Elementa harmonica 4 On rhythmics and metrics 5 Other works 6 Editions and translations 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksLife editAristoxenus was born at Tarentum in modern day Apulia southern Italy in Magna Graecia and was the son of a learned musician named Spintharus otherwise Mnesias 2 He learned music from his father and having then been instructed by Lamprus of Erythrae and Xenophilus the Pythagorean he finally became a pupil of Aristotle 3 whom he appears to have rivaled in the variety of his studies According to the Suda 4 he heaped insults on Aristotle after his death because Aristotle had designated Theophrastus as the next head of the Peripatetic school a position which Aristoxenus himself had coveted having achieved great distinction as a pupil of Aristotle This story is however contradicted by Aristocles who asserts that he only ever mentioned Aristotle with the greatest respect Nothing is known of his life after the time of Aristotle s departure apart from a comment in Elementa Harmonica concerning his works 5 6 Overview of his works editHis writings were said to have consisted of four hundred and fifty three books 4 and dealt with philosophy ethics and music Although his final years were in the Peripatetic school and he hoped to succeed Aristotle on his death Aristoxenus was strongly influenced by Pythagoreanism and was only a follower of Aristotle in so far as Aristotle was a follower of Plato and Pythagoras Thus as Sophie Gibson tells us 7 the various philosophical influences on Aristoxenus included growing up in the profoundly Pythagorean city of Taras Tarentum home also of the two Pythagoreans Archytas and Philolaus and his father s Pythagorean musical background which he inculcated into his son Gibson tells us that after the influence of his father The second important influence on Aristoxenos development was Pythagoreanism Born in Tarentum the city in which both Archytas and Philolaos had lived it can be seen that the extended period of time that Aristoxenus spent in a Pythagorean environment made an indelible impact on the subject matter of his writings Such titles as Pythagorou bios Peri Pythaorou kai ton guorimon autou and Peri tou Pythagorikou biou indicate Aristoxenus interest in the society Furthermore his works on education show evidence of Pythagorean influence particularly in their tendency towards conservatism Most importantly speculation on the structure of music had its origin in a Pythagorean environment Its focus was on the numerical relationship between notes and at its furthest stretch developed into a comparison between musical mathematical and cosmological structures 8 However Aristoxenus disagreed with earlier Pythagorean musical theory in several respects building on their work with ideas of his own The only work of his that has come down to us is the three books of the Elements of Harmony an incomplete musical treatise Aristoxenus theory had an empirical tendency in music he held that the notes of the scale are to be judged not as earlier Pythagoreans had believed by mathematical ratio but by the ear 9 Vitruvius in his De architectura 10 paraphrases the writings of Aristoxenus on music His ideas were responded to and developed by some later theorists such as Archestratus and his place in the methodological debate between rationalists and empiricists was commented upon by such writers as Ptolemais of Cyrene The Pythagorean theory that the soul is a harmony of the four elements composing the body and therefore mortal nothing at all in the words of Cicero 11 was ascribed to Aristoxenus fr 118 121 Wehrli and Dicaearchus This theory is comparable to the one offered by Simmias in Plato s Phaedo Elementa harmonica editIn his Elements of Harmony also Harmonics Aristoxenus attempted a complete and systematic exposition of music The first book contains an explanation of the genera of Greek music and also of their species this is followed by some general definitions of terms particularly those of sound interval and system 12 In the second book Aristoxenus divides music into seven parts which he takes to be the genera intervals sounds systems tones or modes mutations and melopoeia 12 The remainder of the work is taken up with a discussion of the many parts of music according to the order which he had himself prescribed 12 While it is often held among modern scholars that Aristoxenus rejected the opinion of the Pythagoreans that arithmetic rules were the ultimate judge of intervals and that in every system there must be found a mathematical coincidence before such a system can be said to be harmonic 12 Aristoxenus made extensive use of arithmetic terminology notably to define varieties of semitones and dieses in his descriptions of the various genera 13 In his second book he asserted that by the hearing we judge of the magnitude of an interval and by the understanding we consider its many powers 12 And further he wrote that the nature of melody is best discovered by the perception of sense and is retained by memory and that there is no other way of arriving at the knowledge of music and though he wrote others affirm that it is by the study of instruments that we attain this knowledge this he wrote is talking wildly for just as it is not necessary for him who writes an Iambic to attend to the arithmetical proportions of the feet of which it is composed so it is not necessary for him who writes a Phrygian song to attend to the ratios of the sounds proper thereto 12 However this should not be construed as meaning that he postulated a simplistic system of harmony resembling that of modern twelve tone theory and especially not an equally tempered system As he urges us to consider a fter all with which of the people who argue about the shades of the genera should one agree Not everyone looks to the same division when tuning the chromatic or the enharmonic so why should the note a ditone from mese be called lichanos rather than a small amount higher 14 It is sometimes claimed that the nature of Aristoxenus scales and genera deviated sharply from his predecessors That Aristoxenus used a model for creating scales based upon the notion of a topos or range of pitch location 15 is fact however there is no reason to believe that he alone set this precedent as he himself does not make this claim Indeed the idea of unfixed pitch locations that cover certain ranges the limits of which may be defined by fixed points is a notion that was popular until the modern fixation upon fixed pitch systems as is indicated by Baroque theoretical systems of pitch and intonation Another way of stating this however perhaps less accurate is that instead of using discrete ratios to place intervals he used continuously variable quantities The postulation that this resulted in the structuring of his tetrachords and the resulting scales having other qualities of consonance 16 is one that can only be accounted for by the recourse to often repeated inconsistencies amongst his interpreters and modern confirmation bias in favour of simplified twelve tone theories Aristoxenus himself held that two things must not be overlooked first that many people have mistakenly supposed us to be saying that a tone can be divided into three equal parts in a melody They made this mistake because they did not realise that it is one thing to employ the third part of a tone and another to divide a tone into three parts and sing all three Secondly we accept that from a purely abstract point of view there is no least interval 17 In book three Aristoxenus goes on to describe twenty eight laws of melodic succession which are of great interest to those concerned with classical Greek melodic structure 18 On rhythmics and metrics editPart of the second book of a work on rhythmics and metrics Elementa rhythmica is preserved in medieval manuscript tradition Aristoxenus was also the author of a work On the Primary Duration chronos A five column fragment of a treatise on meter P Oxy 9 2687 was published in Grenfell and Hunt s Oxyrhynchus Papyri vol 1 1898 and is probably by Aristoxenus Other works editThe edition of Wehrli presents the surviving evidence for works with the following titles not including several fragments of uncertain origin Life of Pythagoras Py8agoroy bios fr 11 Wehrli On Pythagoras and his pupils Perὶ Py8agoroy kaὶ tῶn gnwrimwn aὐtoῦ fr 14 Wehrli On the Pythagorean life Perὶ toῦ Py8agorikoῦ bioy fr 31 Wehrli Pythagorean maxims or Pythagorean negations Py8agorikaὶ ἀpofaseis fr 34 Wehrli Educational customs or Rules of education Paideytikoὶ nomoi fr 42 43 Wehrli Political laws Politikoὶ nomoi fr 44 45 Wehrli Mantinean character Mantinewn ἔ8h fr 45 I lines 1 9 Wehrli Praise of Mantineans Mantinewn ἐgkwmion fr 45 I lines 10 12 Wehrli Life of Archytas Ἀrxyta bios fr 47 50 Wehrli Life of Socrates Swkratoys bios fr 54 Wehrli Life of Plato Platwnos bios fr 64 Wehrli On tonoi Perὶ tonwn a brief quotation in Porphyry s commentary on Ptolemy s Harmonics p 78 During not edited by Wehrli On music Perὶ moysikῆs fr 80 82 89 Wehrli On listening to music or Lecture course on music Moysikὴ ἀkroasis fr 90 Wehrli On Praxidamas Pra3idamanteia fr 91 Wehrli On melodic composition or On music in lyric poetry Perὶ melopoiias fr 93 Wehrli On musical instruments Perὶ ὀrganwn fr 94 95 102 Wehrli On aulos Perὶ aὐlῶn fr 96 Wehrli On auletes Perὶ aὐlhtῶn fr 100 Wehrli On the boring of aulos Perὶ aὐlῶn trhsews fr 101 Wehrli On choruses Perὶ xorῶn fr 103 Wehrli On tragic dancing Perὶ tragikῆs ὀrxhsews fr 104 106 Wehrli Comparisons of dances Sygkriseis fr 109 Wehrli On tragic poets Perὶ tragῳdopoiῶn fr 113 Wehrli Life of Telestes Telestoy bios fr 117 Wehrli according to whom this Telestes is the dithyrambic poet Miscellaneous table talk or Sympotic miscellany Symmikta sympotika fr 124 Wehrli Notes or Memorabilia Ὑpomnhmata Historical notes Ἱstorikὰ ὑpomnhmata Brief notes Katὰ braxὺ ὑpomnhmata Miscellaneous notes Symmikta ὑpomnhmata Random jottings Tὰ sporadhn fr 128 132 139 WehrliEditions and translations editBarker Andrew 1989 Greek Musical Writings vol 2 Harmonic and Acoustic Theory Cambridge pp 119 89 English translation with introduction and notes ISBN 0 521 61697 2 Macran Henry Stewart 1902 The Harmonics of Aristoxenus Oxford Greek text with English translation and notes archive org Internet Archive Marquard Paul 1868 Die harmonischen Fragmente des Aristoxenus Berlin Greek text with German translation and commentary archive org Google Books Pearson Lionel 1990 Aristoxenus Elementa rhythmica The fragment of Book II and the additional evidence for Aristoxenean rhythmic theory Oxford Greek texts with introduction translation and commentary ISBN 0 19 814051 7 Wehrli Fritz 1967 Die Schule des Aristoteles vol 2 Aristoxenos 2nd ed Basel Stuttgart Greek text excluding the harmonic fragments rhythmic fragments On the Primary Duration and On tonoi see p 28 with commentary in German Westphal Rudolf 1883 1893 Aristoxenus von Tarent Melik und Rhythmik des classischen Hellenenthums 2 vols Leipzig vol 1 vol 2 Westphal Rudolf 1861 Die Fragmente und die Lehrsatze der griechischen Rhythmiker Leipzig pp 26 41 Greek text of Elementa rhythmica and On the Primary Duration Internet Archive See also editPlato s unwritten doctrines for Aristoxenus s report on Plato s Lecture on the GoodNotes edit Aristoxenus of Tarentum in Chambers s Encyclopaedia London George Newnes 1961 Vol 1 p 593 Suda Aristoxenos Aelian H A ii 11 Aulus Gellius iv 11 Cicero Tusc Disp i 18 a b Suda Aristoxenos Aristocles ap Eusebius Praeparatio Evangelica xv 2 A Barker 2007 The Science of Harmonics in Classical Greece Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1139468626 Retrieved 2015 05 03 ed No more of his life history is known Gibson Sophie 2005 Aristoxenus of Tarentum and the Birth of Musicology New York Routledge ISBN 041597061X page needed Gibson Sophie 2005 Aristoxenus of Tarentum and the Birth of Musicology New York Routledge pp 3 4 ISBN 041597061X Chisholm 1911 Vitruvius Book V Chapter IV Cicero Tusculanae Quaestiones 1 22 51 cf 1 11 24 a b c d e f Sir John Hawkins 1868 A General History of the Science and Practice of Music Volume 1 pp 66 7 Barker 1989 pp 142 144 Barker 1989 p 163 Barker 1989 p 140 John Chalmers 1993 Divisions of the Tetrachord Chapter 3 pp 17 22 Frog Peak Music ISBN 0 945996 04 7 Barker 1989 p 160 Barker 1989 pp 170 183 References editBarker Andrew 1989 Greek Musical Writings Cambridge New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 30220 3 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Aristoxenus Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 2 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 522 Further reading editBelis Annie 1986 Aristoxene de Tarente et Aristote le Traite d harmonique Paris Klincksieck Barker Andrew 1978 Hoi Kaloumenoi harmonikoi The Predecessors of Aristoxenus Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society 24 1 21 doi 10 1017 s0068673500003990 Barker Andrew 1978 Music and Perception A Study in Aristoxenus Journal of Hellenic Studies 98 9 16 doi 10 2307 630189 JSTOR 630189 S2CID 161552153 Belis Annie 2001 Aristoxenus In Stanley Sadie John Tyrrell eds The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians Vol 1 London Macmillan Publishers p page needed a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Crocker Richard 1966 Aristoxenus and Greek Mathematics In LaRue Jan ed Aspects of Medieval and Renaissance Music New York W W Norton and Co Henderson Isabel 1957 Ancient Greek Music In Wellesz Egon ed Ancient and Oriental Music The New Oxford History of Music Vol 1 London Oxford University Press Huffman Carl A ed 2011 Aristoxenus of Tarentum Discussion New Brunswick Transaction Publishers RUSCH XVII Huffman Carl 2012 Aristoxenus of Tarentum Texts and Discussions New Brunswick Transactions Publications Levin Flora 1972 Synesis in Aristoxenian Theory Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 103 211 234 doi 10 2307 2935976 JSTOR 2935976 Lippman Edward 1964 Musical Thought in Ancient Greece New York Columbia University Press Rowell Lewis 1979 Aristoxenus on Rhythm Journal of Music Theory 23 Spring 63 79 doi 10 2307 843694 JSTOR 843694 Winnington Ingram R P 1980 Aristoxenus In Stanley Sadie ed The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians Vol 1 London Macmillan Publishers p page needed a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a CS1 maint location missing publisher link External links edit nbsp Works by or about Aristoxenus at Wikisource Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Aristoxenus amp oldid 1166586827, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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