Can art advance our understanding of the world? Is, specifically, music capable of generating
knowledge? The idea of artistic research has recently established a significant career in academia and
beyond. Everyone in the field agrees that artistic research is neither research about art (as in some of the
humanities), nor research for art (applied research in the service of art, as provided by some technical
specialties). Rather, it is meant to be research in and through art. Beyond this general outline, though,
disagreement and hence need for clarification starts. This holds for music in particular, since
its material tone and sound appear so remote from the conceptual sphere, closely associated with
the notion of research. Scientific research is typically seen as the methodical process, with systematic
intent, of gaining new knowledge that others can put to the test. Artistic research may well be different
from scientific research in certain respects. Without significant overlap, however, we should not talk
of artistic research at all. Specifically, research, any research, must aim at producing knowledge of
some kind; otherwise the very idea wears away. The current project on music as a field of artistic
research is thus referred to epistemology, philosophys sub-discipline that, i.a., explores the nature of
knowledge and then goes on to distinguish between different types of knowledge. This renders the
project an interdisciplinary pursuit, mediating between musicology and philosophy. Both forms of
inquiry must interlock. Philosophically, the project aims at an adequate notion of knowledge (and
types of knowledge) to capture artistic research (in music). Musicologically, the issue is when, how
and in what sense music in its various practices (in particular composition, performance,
improvisation, listening) has produced knowledge (rather than just presupposing knowledge, as is
obvious in many instances). This should lead to a direct answer to a question that has been
controversial for some time: Has research been a feature of music throughout historical time and
across cultures or has music as an art form changed only over past decades in such a way that it could
(sometimes) figure as research? In all this, however, we must resist simply applying philosophical
concepts to music; if and when musical phenomena suggest a fine-tuning or even correction of
epistemological notions, we should be prepared to follow that line. The Epistemic Power of Music:
On the Idea and History of Artistic Research through Music thus assumes, within an international
network of researchers, the character of a pioneering project at the interface between epistemology and
music research.