David Davies
McGill University
The Compositional Role of
Performance
Many performances in
the performing arts seem to be performances of an acknowledged artwork of some kind.
We can term the former a Ôperformed workÕ. Where we have an artistic practice
in which some acknowledged artworks are designed to be performed works, the
practice qualifies as what we can term a Ôperformance artÕ, an artistic
practice in which our access to, and appreciation of, works (as receivers) is at least in part mediated by performances of those
works. Drama, music, and dance are usually
taken to be performance arts in this sense.
Philosophical
discussion of the performing arts has largely been concerned with performances
taking place in the performance arts so conceived, and thus with performances
of performed works. Indeed, most philosophical discussion of the performing
arts has focused on performances of performed works of classical music, the
assumption being that the model seen to apply to such examples - what we may
term Ôthe classical paradigmÕ - also applies, with very few exceptions, to
performances in other musical genres and to performances in other performance
media. In all of these cases, it has been widely assumed, performances are generally
of works, and the
work-performance relationship is to be understood on the model of the classical
paradigm. Performances not obviously open to such an analysis - free
improvisations in music or dance, for example - have been viewed either as
limiting cases of the classical paradigm or as of only marginal interest for a
philosophical treatment of the performing arts.
The hegemony of the
Ôclassical paradigmÕ in the performing arts has, however, been questioned in
the recent literature. In music, much attention has been paid to the role of
the recording studio in rock music and the role of improvisation in jazz. In
theatre, James Hamilton has argued against the Ôclassical paradigmÕ and in
favour of an ÔingredientsÕ model of the relationship between a literary script
and the theatrical work. My concern in this paper is with the classical
paradigmÕs assumption that there is an unproblematic boundary between the
compositional activity that results in a performed work and performances of
that work. I examine ways in which the activities of performers can themselves
play a role in the composition of performed works, and assess how this bears
upon the classical paradigm in general.
My interest here is in what can be termed improvisational composition. Here no pre-existing performed work constrains relevant aspects of an
improvised performance. However, the improvisation plays, in whole or in part,
a compositional role by specifying a set of performance constraints for a
performed work. Improvisational composition, I suggest, is possible only if two
conditions are met: (i) there is in place a set of conventions that determine
what the performed work is, given the
performance, and (ii) the
performers intend the performance to be an act of composition. It is open to
question whether these requirements are met in jazz improvisations, but
rehearsals of theatrical and dance performances seem to involve something of
this sort.
Rehearsal in theatre and dance raises some of the same issues as improvisation
in music. In particular, there is an element of both improvisation and
composition in rehearsal, and the final form of a theatrical or dance
performance - even one that conforms to the Ôclassical paradigmÕ in striving,
among other things, to facilitate the appreciation of a performed work - will
usually reflect changes made as a result of innovations introduced in
rehearsal. Furthermore, in dance and theatrical practice, improvisations by
performers in rehearsal may result in new constraints on subsequent
performances. While improvisational composition in contemporary theatre is
perhaps unsurprising - indeed, Hamilton documents such phenomena - what is less
recognised is its prevalence in classical theatre. I draw here on Tiffany
SternÕs work on the compositional role of rehearsal in Shakespearean and
restoration drama
.
Having examined the
compositional roles of improvisation and rehearsal in the performing arts, I
ask whether such roles can be accommodated by modifications of the classical
paradigm, thereby preserving the idea that theatre and dance, and indeed jazz
and rock music, are performance arts in which there are performed works, or
whether we should move away from this paradigm to something closer to
HamiltonÕs ÔingredientsÕ model. Is there still a legitimate place for the
Ôperformed workÕ in a model of artistic performance that acknowledges the
compositional roles of artistic performances?