I N T E R N A T I O N A L
O R G E L P A R K
S Y M P O S I U M
2 0 1 2
POINT & COUNTERPOINT
MUSIC PHILOSOPHICAL VOICES FROM THE LOW COUNTRIES
In 2012, the International Orgelpark Symposium took a modest form: one day instead of three days thinkers and musickers gathered in the Orgelpark, on November 23. The Orgelpark organized the symposium in cooperation with the Dutch Association for Aesthetics (Nederlands Genootschap voor Esthetica), and focused on the idea that music might be considered installation art: an idea that Albert van der Schoot suggested to Hans Fidom, who used it as the foundation for his work at the Orgelpark (Orgelpark Research Program) and the Vrije Universiteit (Chair Organ Studies).
The symposium took place at the Vrije Universiteit (morning) and the Orgelpark (afternoon and evening).
LECTURES / Moderator Hans Maes (University of Kent)
Hans Fidom (Vrije Universiteit/Orgelpark)
Music as Installation Art
Albert van der Schoot (Universiteit van Amsterdam)
Quibus affectibus? Johannes Kepler as musicologist
Rob van Gerwen (Universiteit Utrecht)
Music as an art
Marlies de Munck (Katholieke Universiteit Leuven)
Music and Mystic: towards a philosohpy of musical engagement
Oane Reitsma (Vrije Universiteit)
Religious music: content, form, or experience?
Erik Heijerman (Vrije Universiteit)
Music and Metaphor
ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION (PERIPATHETIC)
Moderator Sander van Maas (Universiteit Utrecht/Universiteit van Amsterdam)
CONCERT
Jörg Abbing and his organ students at the Musikhochschule Saarbrücken improvise together to the silent movie Carmen (1915) van Cecil B. DeMille, playing almost all the instruments at the Orgelpark