Muller is Professor of Music and Director of at Stellenbosch University, where he has held a lectureship in music since 2005. His three-volume study of the South African composer Arnold van Wyk, entitled Nagmusiek, drew heavily on decolonial and deconstructive theories of the archive and Paul Ricoeur’s narratological theories of mimesis to circumvent the problems of writing in Afrikaans about apartheid-era musical composition. Nagmusiek, written in Afrikaans and English, engages in a complex strategy of slipping into and out of fiction, documentary biography, conventional biography and autobiography, while performing a comprehensive listing and categorization of primary manuscript sources relating to Van Wyk music. The book has been described as a radical materialization of Walter Mignolo’s notion of ‘epistemic delinking’, and an enquiry into ‘the relationship between art, academia and fascism’. The book has received awards recognizing it both as an important work of fiction and as a form of non-fiction. Muller’s work to establish and develop the Documentation Centre for Music at Stellenbosch University has led to the acquisition of more than thirty music archives, many of which have subsequently led to important new research. The acquisition of the Eoan Group archive, for example, led to an important oral history project published by The Eoan Group Project as Eoan – Our Story, as well as a documentary film by Aryan Kaganof entitled An Inconsolable Memory. Apart from Kaganof, with whom he has also worked on the films Say it with Flowers and Nagmusiek for you only, Muller has also written about and collaborated with many composers and performers, as well as the visual artists and . Muller has often written about social and political issues as these intersect with music history and aesthetics. Much of this writing has been for lay readers, especially in the decade he wrote for the Afrikaans newspaper, Die Burger. A specific example is the 2004 review of composer Hendrik Hofmeyr’s composition Sinfonia Africana, which led to a vigorous public debate about compositional aesthetics in post-apartheid South Africa. He has also been actively engaged in debates about the place of Afrikaans in post-apartheid South African tertiary institutions.
Awards
Suid-Afrikaanse Akademie vir Wetenskap en Kuns Eugène Marais Prize for a first or early belletristic work awarded to Nagmusiek, 2016.
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Award for a series of research projects entitled ‘Delinking Encounters’, 2015.
Fowler-Hamilton Visiting Research Fellowship, Christ Church, Oxford, September to December 2015.
Chancellor’s Award for Research, Stellenbosch University, 2015.
kykNET-Rapport Prize awarded to Nagmusiek, 2015.
Jan Rabie Rapport Prize for debut fiction awarded to Nagmusiek, 2015.
University of Johannesburg Debut Prize for Creative Writing in Afrikaans for Nagmusiek, 2015.
Newton Advanced Fellowship Award for South African Jazz Cultures and the Archive, 2015.