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Simon Clarke is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy and Music and Deputy Head of Graduate School at the Royal Northern College of Music. Beginning with his 2010 article ‘Line and Colour: Instrumental (Ir-)Rationality in Adorno’s Musicology’, his focus has been the aesthetic foundations of traditional ontology, very much in the Derridean line, though this has more recently developed into a self-styled 3D philosophy (Deconstruction, Dialectics and Dialetheism). In this vein, ‘Debussy’s Speculative Idea: Orchestration and the Substance of Jeux‘, reading Debussy through Hegel’s Science of Logic, was published by the Journal of the Royal Musical Association in 2018. More recently, both ‘Aporetology or Aporetography in Derrida and Badiou’ and (2020) and ‘Nothing Else Matters: Dialetheism and the Event of Sovereignty’ (2022) have appeared in the French journal MaLiCE. He is currently writing a monograph with David Horne entitled Music in Contradiction – here, the idea is to interpret music in accordance primarily with Graham Priest’s Logic of Paradox (LP), along with the work of his fellow ‘paraconsistent frontierspeople’ Hegel, Heidegger, Adorno, Althusser, Derrida and Butler.
As a composer and guitarist Simon’s work centres on his chamber ensemble, Vulgar Display, the unusual conception behind which being an irreconcilable antagonism of extreme metal and the classical chamber tradition. He also specialises in orchestration, most notably the orchestral ‘completion’ of Ravel’s Miroirs (2003) and the remodelling of Ravel’s violin sonata as a violin concerto (2009).
Simon’s research interests, in addition to French and German music of the early twentieth century, are primarily philosophical. Beginning with his 2010 article ‘Line and Colour: Instrumental (Ir-)Rationality in Adorno’s Musicology’, his focus has been the aesthetic foundations of traditional ontology, very much in the Derridean line, though this has more recently developed into a self-styled 3D philosophy (Deconstruction, Dialectics and Dialetheism). In this vein, ‘Debussy’s Speculative Idea: Orchestration and the Substance of Jeux‘, reading Debussy through Hegel’s Logic, was published by the Journal of the Royal Musical Association in 2018. More recently, both ‘Aporetology or Aporetography in Derrida and Badiou’ and (2020) and ‘Nothing Else Matters: Dialeteism and the Event of Sovereignty’ (2022) have appeared in the French journal MaLiCE. He is currently writing a monographh with David Horne entitled Music in Contradiction (publication 2024) – here, the idea is to interpret music in accordance primarily with Graham Priest’s Logic of Paradox (LP), along with the work of his fellow ‘paraconsistent frontierspeople’ Hegel, Heidegger, Adorno, Althusser, Derrida and Butler.
As a composer and guitarist Simon’s work centres on his chamber ensemble, Vulgar Display, the unusual conception behind which being an irreconcilable antagonism of extreme metal and the classical chamber tradition. He also specialises in orchestration, most notably the orchestral ‘completion’ of Ravel’s Miroirs (2003) and the remodelling of Ravel’s violin sonata as a violin concerto (2009).
Journal Articles
Conference Contributions
Compositions
Performances
Simon’s research revolves primarily around Derrida, Badiou and Adorno. His recent conference contributions, including 2018’s 6th Derrida Today event and the 11th International Critical Theory Conference in Rome, have been directed towards a long-term study of Derrida’s and Badiou’s respective ontologies and onto-topologies. 2017, meanwhile, saw the launch of the RNCM Contemporary Philosophy Research Centre (CPRC), of which Simon is the director, through its inaugural conference celebrating the RNCM’s diverse output in the field.
Recent musicological colloquia include 2016’s Virtuosity – An Interdisciplinary Symposium in Budapest, and 2015’s EPARM conference in Graz.
Vulgar Display, a new music ensemble juxtaposing extreme metal with the classical chamber tradition, was founded in 2012 by Simon (the group’s guitarist). Its remit has been to commission and perform new works from the north-west’s pre-eminent composers in accordance with its unconventional stylistic parameters; on this basis, Gary Carpenter, Adam Gorb, Larry Goves, David Horne, Emily Howard, Matthew King and Nina Whiteman, amongst many others, have all been involved. Following December 6 2012’s’Tournament Roadkill’ event, a further RNCM outing, ‘You Suffer’, took place on February 13 2014.