'The project Bent has undertaken here is a large and admirable one, namely to demonstrate how musicians in the 19th century thought about and described music, and there are few people in this field who are better qualified to do this. Bent surveys the fascinating diversity of approaches to analysis of that century (ranging from the verbal, diagrammatic, tabular and notational to the graphic) and relates these to the equally manifold purposes for which analysis was then pursued ...' Brio<br />'These tightly-focused essays complement the considerable achievement of Ian Bent in bringing 19th-century music theory to the attention of musicology.' Julian Rushton, Musical Times<br />'... anyone working on the aesthetics of music, and indeed the history of aesthetics in general, will find much interesting and illuminating material here.' British Journal of Aesthetics