Originally posted by Hofrat
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Hofrat is right, the use of "Opus" is not necessarily a criterion for what constitutes "a work". At issue here is the "work concept" that began to crystallize around the end of the 18th century. It is for this reason that I tantalizingly asked Chris (elsewhere on this forum) if Bach wrote "works". I think he didn't, at least not from his point of view, for when we today speak of "musical works" we are adopting (as received opinion, to an extent) a Romantic ideology.
Let me try to clarify (and you must forgive me in advance for the gross simplifications and generalizations that follow, unless you prefer a 90-page paper on the topic) :
Let us say, then, that prior to the early 19th century most musicians (and composers) were in the employ of either the Church or the aristocracy. The music they wrote was to an extent "ephermeral", that is to say written for specific moments (church ritual, cantatas for the religious calendar, name-days, and so on) or "functions", if you will. The concept of a lasting "work" was alien to this ethos; music was something played on a specific occasion and then to be forgotten. In this context, the idea of a lasting "work" would have been incomprehensible.
However, there was a philosophical "shift" in aesthetic perception in the mid to late 18th century that asked for music to be considered as a "fine art" (to be treated as the plastic arts), or in other words to become "objectified". It is precisely this 'objectification' of music that resulted in the genesis of music composed to be considered as "works", i.e. 'objects' that would last beyond the life of their creators (composers), 'solidified' in score form (in a sort of virtual "museum") that would be replicated (performed) for ever.
What is interesting is that Beethoven arrived on the scene at this moment in history, for as we know from the literature, there was an on-going debate between "light" (for which we should read 'popular' and 'easy') and "serious" music, concepts that had only recently been voiced.
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