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Loops. Canal de cagin. The Unanswered Question 1973 1 Musical Phonology Bernstein Norton. Bernstein on Ives. EDU. Production. Words and Music - Frank Lachmann. Frank M. Lachmann, PhD Papers and Reprints | Self Psychology Bulletin Board Frank Lachmann at a mixer in San Francisco, California, November 2001, after giving a Master Class lecture in the annual Pre-Conference Words and Music Originally delivered as the Kohut Memorial Lecture of the 22nd Annual International Conference on the Psychology of the Self, October 1999 Published simultaneously on the Self Psychology Page and in Progress in Self Psychology, November 2001.

Send a message to Frank Lachmann with your thoughts on this essay. As I lay on my analyst's couch, associating freely, as we did in those days, amid the memories and narratives, among the words that went through my mind, bits of melodies burst forth. . (1) Theme from Bizet’s Symphony in C Windows Media 8 | RealAudio 8 | MP3 The music conveyed my bond with my father. . (2) Waltz from The Merry Widow Windows Media 8 | RealAudio 8 | MP3 That's the waltz from The Merry Widow. So, now for a brief excursion into musicology. "Musicality in Verse" - Gino's Ghazal Blog. The title of this post is the title of an essay by Kenneth Burke, a great literary theorist and philosopher. Burke's contributions have been somewhat overshadowed, perhaps, by the dominance of postmodernism for a numbe of years.

Burke just wasn't fashionable. A Google search on "Kenneth Burke" produced a gratifying number of hits that look good. I'll provide only the University of Minnesota site linked above from his name. The essay this post is based on, "Musicality in Verse," appears in Burke's The Philosophy of Literary Form, Louisiana State University Press, second edition, 1967.

In the post, I put Burke's insights into my own words with my own examples. Burke's main point is this: some speech-sounds closely resemble others, differing only in one or two features. Every language's sound system consists of phonemes — speech-sounds that make a difference in the meaning of words. A common example is the two English words "bit" and "pit.

" October 1940. Kenneth Burke Resources Website. Learn Piano Free Sheet Music - Learn to play piano with our free sheet piano music library!