What Music Did: The Story of Numerocracy in the West
What Music Did: The Story of Numerocracy in the West
by Tony Conrad edited by Patrick Nickleson
University of Michigan Press, 2026 Cloth: 978-0-472-07791-5 | Paper: 978-0-472-05791-7 | eISBN: 978-0-472-22248-3 (standard)
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
In What Music Did, experimental filmmaker and violinist Tony Conrad explores in depth the relationship between music and mathematics. A work of decades that was left unfinished at the time of his death in 2016, Conrad’s expansive history of the interrelationship of music and mathematics is published here for the first time. Editor Patrick Nickleson describes Conrad’s method as that of an anarchic, interarts haberdasher; much of the research comes from musty and out-of-print sources, giving the impression that Conrad followed paths opened up for him in used book shops and conversations, rather than seeking a direct scholarly argument.
Throughout the book, readers encounter scenes from over two thousand years of history, mathematics, and music: Pythagoras using pebbles to articulate didactic number games to his disciples; Galileo fretting a hill and listening with a musician’s ear to calculate the rate of acceleration under gravity; Rameau trapping Western music in a five-limit tuning system, and what could have been if he were more adept with numbers. Even when drawing on classical sources to explore canonical figures like Saint Augustine, What Music Did offers idiosyncratic critical insights that highlight our ongoing cultural reverence when answers result in simple whole number ratios like 3:2, 4:3, or 5:4. What Music Did is Tony Conrad’s extended indictment of music’s role, from the Pythagoreans to the twentieth century, in upholding the use of number as a clandestine and circumscribed armature of power.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Tony Conrad (1940–2016) was a musician, composer, filmmaker, and teacher. After completing his degree in mathematics at Harvard in 1963, Conrad moved to New York where he collaborated with the director Jack Smith on Flaming Creatures; with La Monte Young, Marian Zazeela, and John Cale in the Theatre of Eternal Music; and with his partner Beverly Grant on a series of important structural films including Coming Attractions and Straight and Narrow. In 1976, Conrad joined the new Media Study Department at SUNY-Buffalo, where he was an influential professor and artist across film, video, public access television, music, protest, and visual art for the rest of his career.
Patrick Nickleson is Assistant Professor of Musicology at the University of Alberta, where his work explores theories of authorship, ownership, and collaboration in experimental musics. His past writing on Conrad has been published in Twentieth Century Music, the Journal of the Royal Musical Association, and in his book The Names of Minimalism: Authorship, Art Music, and Historiography in Dispute.
REVIEWS
“Tony Conrad changed a lot of people’s lives in his time with us, as a teacher, both professional and in the wild, a free thinker whose philosophical riddles touched on film, music, art, social responsibility, and all of the places they (un)naturally intertwined. His influence can be seen everywhere, sometimes unknowingly, sometimes overtly, but always manifested in a way that reflects his disobedient spirit.”
— Jim O’Rourke
“Even though Tony Conrad spent decades in and around academia, What Music Did reads as the work of an ingenious autodidact. What Music Did is an idiosyncratic doorstop of a book, a borderline impossible project possessed of brilliance, humor, and eccentric charm.”
— David Grubbs, author of Good night the pleasure was ours
“What Music Did is a remarkably passionate philosophical statement written by someone who played a minor but unforgettable role in the history of music. Editor Patrick Nickleson shines in his ability to make a dense subject matter accessible and leavens the book well with his light, vernacular touch at important moments.”
— Kyle Gann, author of Charles Ives’s “Concord”: Essays after a Sonata
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Tony Oursler. Foreword
Patrick Nickleson. Editor’s Introduction
Tony Conrad. WMD: Preface
Chapter 1: Pythagoras, Pt. 1
Chapter 2: Pythagoras, Pt. 2
Chapter 3: Augustine
Chapter 4: The Middle Ages and Renaissance
Chapter 5: Galilei
Chapter 6: Descartes
Chapter 7: Maurice
Chapter 8: Lully/Louis
Chapter 9: Rameau/Rousseau
Chapter 10: Helmholtz
Notes
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