Originally posted by french frank
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I am probably way out of my depths, but here fwiw is my theory.
Everything is connected to everything before words enter any picture. In terms of how, we are of course limited to words; which is where music is elusive, unless it is actually set to words. We have to go back a long way to discover music before the invention of words and concepts - and there we can agree (or not) with Wagner (in his magnum Oper und Drama) where he posited a period antecedent to the development of language when human utterance had not yet separated out into music on the one hand, and language on the other.
Musical communication could be thought of as analogous to "body language", except for the way in which the development of musical instrument technology - which cannot be separated from productive advances in general and their interconnections with political developments, see what I mean? - acquired an autonomous dynamic of its own in terms of the character of the melodic line. Note the difference between the broad-leaping melodic contour of melodies from the time of JS Bach and compare them with the smoother, vocally-shaped character of melodic contours in say Palestrina, 170 years earlier. The bigger intervallic leaps have come about through the greater ability of instruments than voices to "jump".
The background to all this, especially from Shakespeare's time onwards, has been how human means of seeking guidance for future conduct in history (in whatever sphere, e.g. warfare, religion, etiquette, writing and performing music) has inferred analogical associations back into reading concept-derived meanings (are there any other sort?) into music: meanings which, though capable of communicating basic feelings between maker and recipient which are probably deducible in terms of acoustic properties and their effects on bodies and brains, are nevertheless intelligeable in musical-symbolical terms explicable to the degree that encoded correspondences can be perceived within music linking it to spoken and written means of communication.
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