Knox bristles as Christine speaks. “Ah of course intended to cause no offence, Miss Daye, although Ah expect we all attend this meeting with an expectation of havin’ our viewpoints challenged. Perhaps you forget yourself a little, however: you may recall that mah Sahre - Sir Caiaphas Redfern,” he adds for the benefit of those new to the domain, “someone we all respect and would do well to strahve to emulate, was quahte given to pinning butterflahs to boards. And none loved insects so much as he, but he knew that to understand something, you must very often do it harm. Close observation of exotic beasts captive in zoological gardens, the physician who carves up a cadaver the better to aid the living, the punishing routines of military training. Ah imagine you yourself have produced some unwholesome notes from your normally angelic instruments from tahme to tahme as you strove to discover the limits of their capabilities by pushing them beyond.
At the risk of causin’ further distress, Ah feel Ah should mention also that devahces exist to exhibit a series of photographs in such quick succession as to fool the aah into seeing motion - so, whahle perhaps a picture in a book does not adequately substitute for the flow of music through tahme in this thought exercise, a dance can also be seen precisely identically again and again.
Indeed, this is one of the major reasons for establishing these meetings! Tahmes and our situations are changing, and it is useful to examine which of our old assumptions remain relevant and which need to adapt.
Now, to consider the concept of a scientific aspect of music, perhaps Miss Daye would be best positioned to answer this. In composition of new music, are there certain chords or progressions or techniques that tend to invoke particular emotions in the listener? Ah know little of music mahself, to mah shame, but the distinction between major and mahnor notes is often spoken of.”