If music analysis is indeed a fully-fledged discipline as evidenced, for instance, by the various European conferences on the subject (and the research community that gathers regularly under its banner), can it still be considered as being an autonomous one? The close ties that music analysis maintains with musicology will require clarification from institutional as well as scholarly perspectives. To what extent does it still correspond to the branch of ‘systematic musicology’ as defined by Adler in 1885? Music analysis also has a long tradition of interdisciplinary dialogue with various fields in the humanities and the so-called ‘pure’ sciences. What then has the impact of these disciplines and their evolution been on music analysis itself?
Finally, music analysis is often associated with music theory, whose role will need to be clarified. Is theory a necessary condition for a scientific approach to musical phenomenon? Or does the confrontation between theory and analysis reveal cultural rather than epistemological differences resulting from a number of national ‘traditions’ or linked to geographic and linguistic areas? Do not such differences reveal a form of immaturity in the discipline and its pre-scientific status? Is the fragmentation of music analysis into increasingly irreconcilable approaches, compounded by linguistic obfuscation and parochial interests not contrary to the very spirit of research?