“A post-humanist organicism? A formalism fit for the Anthropocene? Watkins shows that these are not contradictions—far from it. Musical Vitalities makes a timely case for the contemporary relevance of Hanslick, Schopenhauer, and Darwin. This is the urgent aesthetic manifesto for ecomusicology that we have been waiting for.”
— Alexander Rehding, Harvard University
“This audacious book revisits the rich relationship between music and nature so central to Romantic aesthetics. . . . Beautifully written and punctuated with eclectic analyses of works ranging from Schumann to John Luther Adams, Musical Vitalities uncovers important, indeed vital, connections between nineteenth-century ideals of music and post-humanist conceptions of life.”
— Berthold Hoeckner, University of Chicago
“With rare generosity and an exhilarating abundance of ideas, Holly Watkins reanimates long dismissed organicist concepts of music in this bracing synthesis of nature and culture, physis and poiesis, science and aesthetics. The result is the fullest measure yet taken of music’s vitality in the bountiful worlds within us and around us.”
— Scott Burnham, City University of New York
“Expertly researched and beautifully written, Musical Vitalities reaches beyond musicology in innovative and provocative ways. It stands to make a lasting contribution to interdisciplinary dialogue.”
— Aaron S. Allen, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
"In Musical Vitalities, Holly Watkins invites her readers to vegetate. . . Building a philosophy of musical form and meaning around the idea of music’s vitality, Watkins brings humanistic and scientific approaches to bear on the question of how the aesthetic realm, and specifically music, exposes cross-species biological commonalities. . . . Musical Vitalities is imaginative and stimulating in its nuanced rethinking of relationships among music, consciousness, and the nonhuman."
— Kirsten Paige, Journal of the American Musicological Society
"Musical Vitalities is a challenging, even necessary read for ecomusicologists, particularly those who have ever questioned if their taste for nineteenth-century music was somehow ecologically suspect. Watkins’s synthesis of past criticism and modern science will also appeal to those interested in nineteenth-century musical aesthetics, even if they do not already identify as ecocritical readers."
— Notes