Erich Moritz von Hornbostel (born Feb. 25, 1877, Vienna, Austria—died Nov. 28, 1935, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, Eng.) was an Austrian musicologist and ethnologist.
Brought up in a highly musical home, Hornbostel studied piano, harmony, and counterpoint. Although by his late teens he was a skilled performer and composer, his university studies (at Heidelberg, 1895–99) were in the natural sciences and philosophy, and his Ph.D. was in chemistry (Heidelberg, 1900). He then moved to Berlin, where, influenced by Carl Stumpf, he combined his musicological studies with experimental psychology, especially the phenomena of tone psychology. He became assistant to Stumpf at the Psychological Institute, and, when its archives became the foundation of the Berlin Phonogramm-Archiv in 1906, Hornbostel was named its first director, a post he held until he was dismissed in 1933 by the Nazi regime. (His mother, the singer Helene Magnus, was Jewish.)
From Germany Hornbostel went first to Switzerland, then to the United States, and finally England. Hornbostel was coeditor (with Stumpf) of the Sammelbände für vergleichende Musikwissenschaft (“Collected Volumes for Comparative Musicology”) from 1922 until his death.
Hornbostel was a specialist in Asian, African, and other non-European music. Collaborating with Stumpf and Otto Abraham, he devised a system combining the concepts of acoustics, psychology, and physiology for the study of non-European musical cultures, a procedure that has been credited with establishing comparative musicology as a recognized discipline. With Abraham he published a series of essays on non-European music (including Japanese, Turkish, and Indian) and formulated a method for transcribing music from recordings; in 1904 they proposed an approach to the study of comparative musicology roughly parallel to that used in comparative linguistics. Hornbostel also demonstrated the importance of observable, measurable musicological data to ethnological research.
Among his most valuable contributions to ethnomusicology are his studies on the psychology of musical perception, the relationship between a culture and its tuning system, and the innovative classification of musical instruments (with Curt Sachs, 1914).