Music reviews and criticism Books
Boydell & Brewer Ltd The Violin
Book SynopsisProvides new perspectives on the violin's beloved concert repertoire, its diverse roles in indigenous musical traditions on four continents, and its metaphorical presence in visual arts and literature. With a colorful history that spans 450 years, the violin has proven to be one of the world's most important and versatile instruments. Addressed to performing musicians, serious concertgoers, and collectors of recordings, The Violin offers insightful, up-to-date essays on a wide range of topics. Essays discuss beloved masterpieces from the violin's solo repertoire, with individual chapters on the Italian Baroque, Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, and the violin concerto in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, as well as the evolution of performance styles and interpretation as documented in recordings. The volume also illustrates the broad cultural and geographic reach of the instrument, offering readers a taste of the traditional music of Argentina, Mexico, Norway, and India, in which the violin's participation is an essential and characteristic element. Other chapters are devoted to American fiddling andto the violin and violinists as metaphors in literature and the visual arts. CONTRIBUTORS: Chris Goertzen, Eitan Ornoy, Robert Riggs, Peter Walls, Peter Wollny. Musicologist and violinist Robert Riggs (PhD,Harvard University) chairs the Department of Music at the University of Mississippi and is the author of articles on Mozart as well as the monograph Leon Kirchner: Composer, Performer, and Teacher (URP 2010).Trade ReviewSucceeds in emphasizing the versatility and global reach of the instrument to readers in the early stages of exploring these topics. Though Riggs devotes space to non-Western genres, the majority of the book systematically presents 'standard' violin repertoire...[Includes] a useful guide for violinists interested in reading fiction related to their instrument. * MUSIC LIBRARY ASSOCIATION NOTES *Fascinating... Riggs presents a wealth of information...written in a reader friendly style. * EARLY MUSIC *If you wish to know more about its 'virtuous and rascally associations,' (indeed the violin was long associated with the devil), this enjoyable treatise will enlighten, entertain and educate. * AUSTA STRINGENDO *Casts a wide net. There are chapters on violins and violinists in literature, the violin's association with death and the devil, recordings as documentation of performance practice, and the violin's adoption by different cultures. * AMERICAN RECORD GUIDE *Table of ContentsAssociations with Death and the Devil - Robert Riggs Violinists and Violins in Literature - Robert Riggs The Violin in Italy during the Baroque Period - Peter Walls Bach and the Violin - Peter Wollny Mozart, Beethoven, and the Violin - Robert Riggs The Violin Concerto and Virtuosity in the Nineteenth Century - Robert Riggs The Violin Concerto in the Twentieth Century - Robert Riggs The Masters' Voice: Recordings as Documentation of Performance Practice - Eitan Ornoy The Peripatetic Violin - Chris Goertzen The Devil's Box No More: Fiddling in America - Chris Goertzen Notes on Contributors Index
£25.19
Boydell & Brewer Ltd Reviving Haydn: New Appreciations in the
Book SynopsisExamines the decline and resurgence of Haydn's reputation in an effort to better understand the forces that shape critical reception on a broad scale. By the 1840s Joseph Haydn, who died in 1809 as the most celebrated composer of his generation, had degenerated into the bewigged "Papa Haydn," a shallow placeholder in music history who merely invented the forms used by Beethoven.In a remarkable reversal, Haydn swiftly regained his former stature within the opening decades of the twentieth century. Reviving Haydn: New Appreciations in the Twentieth Century examines both the decline and the subsequent resurgence of Haydn's reputation in an effort to better understand the forces that shape critical reception on a broad scale. No single person or event marked the turning point for Haydn's reputation. Instead a broad resurgence reshaped opinion in Europe and the United States in short order. The Haydn revival engaged many of the music world's leading figures -- composers (Vincent d'Indy and Arnold Schoenberg), conductors (Arturo Toscanini), performers (Wanda Landowska), critics (Lawrence Gilman), and scholars (Heinrich Schenker and Donald Tovey) -- each of whom valued Haydn's music for specific reasons and used it to advance particular goals. Yet each advocated for a rehearing and rereading of the composer's works, calling for a new appreciation of Haydn's music. Bryan Proksch is Assistant Professor of Music History at Lamar University.Trade Review[Proksch goes beyond previous studies by Botstein and Garratt by illustrating] how the nineteenth-century degradation and the twentieth-century revival of Haydn's music are both linked to the championing of newer music by composers and critics. Proksch's historical narrative...is certainly compelling. Haydn enthusiasts and scholars alike will greatly appreciate this story told in a reasonably comprehensive, single-volume account. -- Melanie Lowe * FONTES ARTIS MUSICAE *Sensitively outlines the progression in which Haydn came increasingly to be viewed as a mere stepping-stone toward Ludwig van Beethoven. Heinrich Schenker's diverse approaches to the composer are explored . . . most persuasively. Proksch's drawing on diverse primary sources allows for precious insights into the American musical scene. A thoughtfully written and overall very useful addition to the Haydn literature. Forcefully reminds us that Haydn's historical and aesthetic relevance is not an absolute given, but something his advocates must fight for day by day in the concert halls, in the general press, and in scholarly publications. -- Balazs Mikusi * MLA NOTES *Proksch masterfully untangles the various agendas that marked Haydn's reception, especially those involved in rebuilding the composer's reputation in the post-Romantic era. Reception historians must take up the challenge to explore that mind and ferret out hidden significance and meaning; to do less is simply to report what has already been printed or said. Proksch answers the call admirably and tells a fascinating story in the process. -- Jess Tyre http://haydnjournal.org * HAYDN JOURNAL *Haydn scholarship has long been in need of a comprehensive account of the composer's reception. One of Proksch's most striking insights is that both the decline and the revival of the composer's critical fortunates were connected to the claims of new music. The case studies cover France, Austria and Germany, the United States, and Great Britain, and involve figures such as d'Indy, Saint-Sae'ns, Schenker, Schoenberg, and Tovey. Bryan Proksch offers plenty of fresh material to chew on, especially for his focal period of the first half of the twentieth century. JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MUSICOLOGICAL SOCIETY [W. Dean Sutcliffe] -- W. Dean Sutcliffe * JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MUSICOLOGICAL SOCIETY *Table of ContentsAcknowledgements Introduction: A Revival in Context Haydn's Fall A Reputation at an Ebb Recomposing H-A-Y-D-N in Fin de Siecle France Eccentric Haydn as Teacher Haydn and the Neglect of German Genius Schoenberg's Lineage to Haydn Haydn in American Musical Culture Croatian Tunes, Slavic Paradigms, and the Anglophone Haydn The Genesis of Tovey's Haydn Conclusion: Haydn in the "Bad Old Days" Appendix: A Note on Methodology and the Russians Notes Bibliography Index
£89.10
Boydell & Brewer Ltd Stravinsky's Great Passacaglia : Recurring
Book SynopsisThe first full-length analytic study devoted to the Concerto for Piano and Wind Instruments, combining sketch studies, musicological context, and straightforward analyses of all three movements. Stravinsky's "Great Passacaglia" marks the first full-length analytic study devoted to the Concerto for Piano and Wind Instruments, an important neoclassic piece composed by one of the most influential composers of the twentieth century. Donald Traut examines the complex significance of this piece for Stravinsky and his contemporaries. For the composer, the Concerto was both a major artistic accomplishment in his burgeoning neoclassic style and a vehicle for financial gain as a touring soloist, an endeavor that took him throughout Europe and was instrumental in bringing him to America for the first time. For many of Stravinsky's critics it came to represent all that was wrong with his new style, while for others it pointed the way forward through the past, taking on an important role in the Bach revival of the 1920s. By combining sketch studies, musicological context, and straightforward analyses ofall three movements, the book paints a comprehensive picture of the piece's creation, impact, and structure that will be of interest not only to musicologists and music theorists, but to pianists, conductors, and concert-goers aswell. Donald Traut is associate professor of music theory at the University of Arizona.Trade Review[S]hould provide a great resource for scholars, conductors, and performers interested in deepening their understanding of Stravinsky's concerto and his neoclassical style. * NOTES: JOURNAL OF THE MUSIC LIBRARY ASSOCIATION *Table of ContentsIntroduction Context and Composition Concerto as Catalyst Analytical Tools and Recurring Elements Counterpoint and Tonality in the First Movement Tetrachords and Tritones in the Largo Points of Imitation in the Finale Conclusion Appendix Notes Bibliography Index
£76.00
Boydell & Brewer Ltd Bach to Brahms: Essays on Musical Design and
Book SynopsisPresents current analytic views by established scholars of the traditional tonal repertoire, with essays on works by Bach, Handel, Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, Chopin, and Brahms. Bach to Brahms presents current analytic views on the traditional tonal repertoire, with essays on works by Bach, Handel, Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, Chopin, and Brahms. The fifteen essays, written by well-established scholars of this repertoire, are divided into three groups, two of which focus primarily on elements of musical design (formal, metric, and tonal organization) and voice leading at multiple levels of structure. The third groupof essays focuses on musical motives from different perspectives. The result is a volume of integrated studies on the music of the common-practice period, a body of music that remains at the core of modern concert and classroom repertoire. Contributors: Eytan Agmon, David Beach, Charles Burkhart, L. Poundie Burstein, Yosef Goldenberg, Timothy L. Jackson, William Kinderman, Joel Lester, Boyd Pomeroy, John Rink, Frank Samarotto, Lauri Suurpää, Naphtali Wagner, Eric Wen, Channan Willner. David Beach is professor emeritus and former dean of the Faculty of Music, University of Toronto. Yosef Goldenberg teaches at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and at the Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance, where he also serves as head librarian.Trade ReviewWINNER of the 2016 Outstanding Multi-Author Publication Award * SOCIETY OF MUSIC THEORY *Table of ContentsIntroduction Strolling through a Haydn Divertimento with Two Heinrichs Ritornelli or Soli: Which Did Mozart Write First in the Opening Movement of His Violin Concerto K. 207? Outer Form, Inner Form, and Other Musical Narratives in Beethoven's Opus 14, No. 2 Temporal Poise and Oblique Dynamic in the First Movement of Beethoven's "Archduke" Trio Chopin as an Interpreter of Mozart: The Variations Opus 2 and Don Giovanni The First Movement of Brahms's Fourth Symphony Revisited: A Study of the Fanfare and the "Cloud of Mystery" "Capricious Play": Veiled Cyclic Relations in Brahms's Ballades Op. 10 and Fantasies Op. 116 Chopin's Study in Syncopation A Sharp Practice, A Natural Alternative: The Transition into the Recapitulation in the First Movement of Beethoven's "Hammerklavier" Sonata Ernst Oster's Vision of Hidden Repetitions and Motivic Enlargements in J. S. Bach's Short Keyboard Works The "Pseudo-Einsatz" in Two Handel Fugues: Heinrich Schenker's Analytical Work with Reinhard Oppel Formal Fusion and Its Effect on Voice-Leading Structure: The First Movement of Beethoven's Opus 132 Revisited Indistinct Formal Functions and Conflicting Temporal Processes in the Second Movement of Brahms's Third Symphony The Interaction of Structure and Design in the Opening Movements of Schubert's Piano Trios in B-flat Major (D. 898) and E-flat Major (D. 929) The Suspenseful Structure of Brahms's C-Major Capriccio, Op. 76, No. 8: A Schenkerian Hearing List of Contributors Index
£89.10
Boydell & Brewer Ltd Rethinking Hanslick: Music, Formalism, and
Book SynopsisAn innovative and incisive reassessment of a seminal figure in nineteenth-century musical life, through a fresh consideration of his aesthetic, critical, and autobiographical writings. Rethinking Hanslick: Music, Formalism, and Expression is the first extensive English-language study devoted to Eduard Hanslick--a seminal figure in nineteenth-century musical life. Bringing together eminent scholars from several disciplines, this volume examines Hanslick's contribution to the aesthetics and philosophy of music and looks anew at his literary interests. The essays embrace ways of thinking about Hanslick's writings that go beyond the polarities that have long marked discussion of his work such as form/expression, absolute/program music, objectivity/subjectivity, and formalist/hermeneutic criticism. This approach takes into consideration both Hanslick's important On the Musically Beautiful and his critical and autobiographical writings, demonstrating Hanslick's rich insights into the context in which a musical work is composed, performed, and received. Rethinking Hanslick serves as an invaluable companion to Hanslick's prodigious scholarship and criticism, deepening our understanding of the major themes and ideas of one of the most influential music critics of the nineteenth century. Contributors: David Brodbeck, James Deaville, Chantal Frankenbach, Lauren Freede, Marion Gerards, Dana Gooley, Nicole Grimes, David Kasunic, David Larkin, Fred Everett Maus, Timothy R. McKinney, Nina Noeske, Anthony Pryer,Felix Wörner Nicole Grimes is Marie Curie Fellow at University College Dublin (UCD) and the University of California, Irvine. Siobhán Donovan is a college lecturer at the School of Languages and Literatures, UCD. Wolfgang Marx is a senior lecturer at the School of Music, UCD.Trade ReviewThis Rethinking is timely . . . exploring the tension between Hanslick's ceaselessly revised treatise On the Musically Beautiful and his work as a practicing music critic. * DIE MUSIKFORSCHUNG *Make[s] a convincing case for further attention to this important figure in musical history. * JOURNAL OF MUSIOCLOGICAL RESEARCH *A significant reassessment. . . . A much-needed collection of studies that reevaluate Hanslick's overall output in a broader cultural context, in particular that of Vienna in the second half of the nineteenth century. . . . Opens new doors to future studies on Hanslick's stance as an aesthetician and critic in the appropriate sociocultural context. The book also succeeds in presenting numerous complex issues surrounding the general [written] output of Hanslick in a coherent manner. * MUSIC LIBRARY ASSOCIATION NOTES *A virtual kaleidoscope of scholarship. . . . Rich and thoroughly researched discussions . . . will find many grateful readers in countless and diverse disciplines. * MUSIC REFERENCE SERVICES QUARTERLY [Ann Lee] *Manages to traverse a good deal of the work of this long-lived and prolific writer on music, and to highlight-productively-the contrasts and even the ambiguities, with respect to matters of identity, national and otherwise, that the full range of his writings reveals. * MUSICAL TIMES *The first English-language study of its kind in 60 years. . . . Cogent and . . . exemplary essays in aesthetic history. * CHOICE *The contributors are determined to tease out the nuances and contradictions of Hanslick's thought. . . . David Kasunic sensitively explores the ambiguities of Hanslick's attitutdes to his own Jewish ancestry. . . . David Brodbeck continues his valuable series of investigations into Hanslick's reception of cultural Others in the contemporary sphere of 'German' music. * MUSIC & LETTERS *Rethinking Hanslick paints a diverse but coherent picture of Hanslick's critical career and its multifaceted cultural significance. Adding to recent work expanding the musicological understanding of Hanslick's legacy, this volume will be of major interest to musicologists, music theorists, and aestheticians engaged in the criticism and analysis of nineteenth-century music, as well as to those scholars more specifically concerned with the impact of Hanslick's aesthetics on twentieth-century formalist perspectives on music. -- Holly Watkins, Eastman School of MusicTable of ContentsIntroduction Negotiating the "Absolute": Hanslick's Path through Musical History Hanslick's Composers Hanslick, Legal Processes, and Scientific Methodologies: How Not to Construct an Ontology of Music Otakar Hostinský, the Musically Beautiful, and the Gesamtkunstwerk Hanslick on Johann Strauss Jr.: Genre, Social Class, and Liberalism in Vienna Waltzing around the Musically Beautiful: Listening and Dancing in Hanslick's Hierarchy of Musical Perception "Poison-Flaming Flowers from the Orient and Nightingales from Bayreuth": On Hanslick's Reception of the Music of Goldmark German Humanism, Liberalism, and Elegy in Hanslick's Writings on Brahms The Critic as Subject: Hanslick's Aus meinem Leben as a Reflection on Culture and Identity "Faust und Hamlet in Einer Person": The Musical Writings of Eduard Hanslick as Part of the Gender Discourse in the Late Nineteenth Century Body and Soul, Content and Form: On Hanslick's Use of the Organism Metaphor Hanslick and Hugo Wolf Battle Rejoined: Hanslick and the Symphonic Poem in the 1890s On "Jewishness" and Genre: Hanslick's Reception of Gustav Mahler Selected Bibliography List of Contributors Index
£34.00
Boydell & Brewer Ltd Rossini and Post-Napoleonic Europe
Book SynopsisWarren Roberts has discovered a Rossini that others have not seen, a composer who commented ironically and satirically on religion and politics in Post-Napoleonic Europe. This book examines Rossini within the context of his own time, one of Napoleonic domination of Italy, restoration of the Bourbon monarchy in Naples in 1815, and the 1830 Revolution in Paris. Using the techniques of the historian,and reading librettos as texts, the author analyzes the five operas treated in detail in the book (Il barbiere di Siviglia, Cenerentola, La gazza ladra, Matilde di Shabran, and Il viaggio a Reims) as responses, each in its own way, to the history that the composer experienced. Roberts shows that Rossini made probing commentaries on politics and religion in a time of reaction and revolution, and that the composer was well-informed on post-Napoleonic politics. Rossini's comic writing served very serious purposes, exposing the problems and complications of an age that he observed with striking clarity. Warren Roberts is Professor Emeritusof History at the University at Albany, SUNY, and has published extensively on eighteenth-century French culture.Trade ReviewAstounding...Unique in its historical approach, which, by confronting artistic creativity, contemporary historical developments, and socio-political contexts, provides a priceless key for anyone interested in analyzing the early-eighteenth-century milieu thanks to which Rossini became (as Stendhal put it) 'the Napoleon of a musical era. -- Federico Gon * AD PARNASSUM *Takes a unique approach to Gioachino Rossini and five of his operas. The author puts the operas in historical context and argues that they could have been written only in a post-revolutionary Napoleonic age. Roberts calls these works operas of the historical present. Rossini is responding to the sociological and ideological currents of the times. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty and professionals; general readers. * CHOICE *Rossini and Post-Napoleonic Europe is a very original and enterprising project -- one, I think, which could only have been undertaken by a historian. It is a most valuable addition to the literature on Rossini. * Anthony Arblaster, author of Viva la Libertà! Politics in Opera *[A] magisterial contribution to our understanding of the complex relationship between cultural and political history. * JOURNAL OF EUROPEAN STUDIES *Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Introduction Setting the Stage: Opera Buffa and Comedy of Manners in an Age of Democratic Revolution Rossini, Mozart, Paisiello, and the Barber of Seville Jane Austen, Goya, Rossini, and the Post-Napoleonic Age: La Cenerentola Rossini, Beethoven, and Rescue Opera: Fidelio and La gazza ladra Rossini, Ferretti, Matilde di Shabran, and the Revolution of 1820-21 Stendhal and Rossini in Paris: Il viaggio a Reims, Le Comte Ory, and the July Revolution Conclusion: Thinking about Rossini Notes Bibliography Index
£81.00
Boydell & Brewer Ltd Songs without Words: Keyboard Arrangements of
Book SynopsisPathbreaking study of a vast and intriguing repertoire: arrangements for keyboard instruments of songs, arias, and other vocal pieces, from the age William Byrd to that of Handel. Keyboard arrangements of vocal music flourished in England between1560 and 1760. Songs without Words, by noted harpsichordist and early-music authority Sandra Mangsen, is the first in-depth study of this topic, uncovering abody of material that is remarkably varied, musically interesting, and indicative of major trends in musical and social life at the time. Mangsen's Songs without Words argues that the pieces upon which these keyboardarrangements were based constituted a shared repertoire, akin to the jazz standards of the twentieth century. In Restoration England, the ballad tradition saw tunes and texts move between oral, manuscript, and printed transmissionand from street to playhouse and back again. During the eighteenth century, printed keyboard arrangements were aimed particularly at female amateur keyboardists and helped opera to become a widely popular genre. Songs without Words considers a wide range of model pieces, including songs of many kinds and arias and other numbers from operas and oratorios. The resulting keyboard versions range from simple and pedagogically oriented to highly virtuosic. Two central issues -- the relationship between an arrangement and its model and the reception and aesthetics of arrangements -- are explored in the framing chapters. The result is a study that will be of great interest toscholars, performers, and anyone who loves the music of the late Renaissance, Baroque, and early Classic eras. Sandra Mangsen is professor emerita of music at the University of Western Ontario.Trade ReviewOffers a useful introduction to selected repertories of vocal music arranged for keyboard in England between the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries and also charts some territory that will be unfamiliar to most readers. * EARLY MUSIC PERFORMER *The subject of musical arrangement is one that has begun to arouse increasing interest among musicologists in recent years, as they have moved away from a long-standing tendency to deride such reworkings. It is thus particularly welcome that musicology's re-evaluation of arrangement as a creative activity has included a strong focus on early music, especially that of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Sandra Mangsen's book is the first full-length study of the topic for the early modern period, so it forms an important addition to the field. * MUSIC & LETTERS *A well-documented book on a very attractive topic that is still little researched. The prose is clear and the tables are detailed and informative. [Mangsen] considers the purposes and motivations for the dissemination of arrangements in a longer chronological perspective, aligning Babell's virtuoso display with that of Liszt or Godowsky. * EARLY MUSIC *Mangsen should be congratulated for her thorough investigation into such a broad subject with numerous sources of disparate natures. This repertory has not received such thoughtful interrogation in a book-length publication, and Songs without Words has taken a large step toward helping us understand the complex interweaving of theatre culture, domestic markets, social interaction, and the role of performers/composers/copyists in musical transmission between 1560 and 1760. . . . [A] valuable and significant contribution to the literature on English music and will significantly aid future examinations that further our understanding of this exciting period. * NABMSA REVIEWS *Sandra Mangsen brings deep and thorough research to [her] central topic. The book raises and answers questions like: What was the market for the keyboard arrangements of songs from the pop culture of the day? Did it vary by gender? Were they intended for professionals, good amateurs, or dilettantes? What purposes did these pieces serve before the age of recording? Does the absence of a song's words imply anything for performances? Should keyboard arrangements of songs be considered as important repertoire alongside original keyboard pieces? . . . Physically deluxe, . . . a nice-looking book. * AMERICAN RECORD GUIDE *Table of ContentsIntroduction Ballads Transformed Arias Domesticated: The Ladys Entertainment and Other Early Eighteenth-Century Anthologies With Their Symphonies: William Babell and The Ladys Entertainment Books 3 and 4 Opera Remix: Babell's Suits of 1717 After Babell: Arrangements for Ladies and Gentlemen Afterthoughts Appendix: The Ladys Banquet (Second Series): Contents, Concordances, and Dissemination Notes Bibliography Index
£89.25
Boydell & Brewer Ltd Explorations in Schenkerian Analysis
Book SynopsisDisplays the range and diversity of Schenkerian studies today in fifteen essays covering music from Bach through Debussy and Strauss. Explorations in Schenkerian Analysis is a collection of fifteen essays dedicated to the memory of Edward Laufer, an influential advocate of Schenker's method. The chapters are presented in chronological order by composer, opening with Charles Burkhart's contribution, which is presented as a letter to Edward Laufer (written before his death), and ending with excerpts from Stephen Slottow's 2003 interview with Laufer (in an appendix). Whilethe unifying focus is Schenkerian analysis, there is considerable variety in the approaches taken by the contributors. There is also variety in the composers represented, ranging from Bach to Debussy and Strauss. The volume thusdisplays the scope and diversity of Schenkerian studies today. CONTRIBUTORS: Mark Anson-Cartwright, David Beach, Matthew Brown, Charles Burkhart, L. Poundie Burstein, Timothy L. Jackson, Roger Kamien, Leslie Kinton, SuYin Mak, Ryan McClelland, Don McLean, Boyd Pomeroy, William Rothstein, Frank Samarotto, Stephen Slottow, Lauri Suurpää David Beach is professor emeritus and former dean of the Faculty of Music, University of Toronto. SuYin Mak is associate professor of music at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.Trade Review[E]xpands the literature on Schenker studies in important and fascinating ways. It belongs on the bookshelf of any Schenkerian but would also be a wonderful resource for intermediate and advanced classes in Schenkerian analysis. * NOTES: JOURNAL OF THE MUSIC LIBRARY ASSOCIATION *The analyses in the book are of a high quality [and treat] form and structure, the role of motif (a trademark of Laufer), and the relationship between voice-leading structure and musical meaning. Just as aspects of form and design can influence voice-leading structures, Schenkerian studies such as these have much to contribute to form studies. A welcome contribution to the Schenkerian analytical corpus. * MUSIC & LETTERS *Table of ContentsPreface A Letter about the C-Major Fugue from The Well-Tempered Clavier, Book 1 - Charles Burkhart The Opening Tonal Complex of Bach's St. Matthew Passion: A Linear View - Mark Anson-Cartwright Recurrence and Fantasy in C. P. E. Bach's Rondo in G Major - Frank Samarotto Voice-Leading Procedures in Galant Expositions - L. Poundie Burstein The First Movements of Anton Eberl's Symphonies in E-flat Major and D Minor, and Beethoven's Eroica: Toward "New" Sonata Forms? - Timothy Jackson Schubert's "Unfinished" Symphony: Analytical Observations - David W. Beach Structural and Form-Functional Ambiguities in the First Movement of Schubert's Octet in F Major, D. 803 - Su Yin Mak The Form of Chopin's Prelude in B-flat Major, Op. 28, No. 21 - Roger Kamien "All That Is Solid Melts into Air": Schumann's Overture to Manfred - William Rothstein Endings without Resolution: The Slow Movement and Finale of Schumann's Second Symphony - Lauri Suurpää Half-Diminished-Seventh Openings in Brahms's Lieder - Ryan McClelland Motivic Enlargement in Dvorák's Symphony Op. 70 - Leslie Kinton Deliverance and Compositional Design in the "Libera me" of Verdi's Messa da Requiem - Donald R. McLean Polyphony and Cacophony? A Schenkerian Reading of Strauss's "Dance of the Seven Veils" - Matthew Brown A Force of Nature: Debussy and the Chromatically Displaced Dominant - Boyd Pomeroy Appendix: An Interview with Edward Laufer - Stephen Slottow
£103.50
Boydell & Brewer Ltd Building the Operatic Museum: Eighteenth-Century
Book SynopsisThe pathbreaking revival in Paris ca. 1900 of long-neglected operas by Mozart, Gluck, and Rameau -- and what this meant to French audiences, critics, and composers. Focusing on the operas of Mozart, Gluck, and Rameau, Building the Operatic Museum examines the role that eighteenth-century works played in the opera houses of Paris around the turn of the twentieth century. These works, mostly neglected during the nineteenth century, became the main exhibits in what William Gibbons calls the Operatic Museum -- a physical and conceptual space in which great masterworks from the past and present could, like works ofvisual art in the Louvre, entertain audiences while educating them in their own history and national identity. Drawing on the fields of musicology, museum studies, art history, and literature, Gibbons explores how this "museum" transformed Parisian musical theater into a place of cultural memory, dedicated to the display of French musical greatness. William Gibbons is Associate Professor of Musicology at Texas Christian University.Trade ReviewWhat makes the book particularly worthwhile is its careful contextualization of the major fin-de siècle revivals of eighteenth-century operas including abundant selections from critical discourse. . . . One of the merits of Gibbons' book is the way it enables us to see how these dilemmas [of historical fidelity vs. practical viability, and of Germanic traditions vs. French national pride] were understood, and hotly debated, throughout the period in question, paving the way for a conception of the repertoire that is still very much with us. The book's most engrossing section is probably the one devoted to Mozart, for the [Austrian] composer's place within the French operatic pantheon would always entail the most complex negotiations. * NINETEENTH-CENTURY MUSIC REVIEW *Gibbons's well-written study of the productions of eighteenth-century operas in late nineteenth-century Paris considers broad issues of edition-making, nationalist interpretation, allegorical readings, and value judgment. An important addition to critical reflections on canon building. -- Steven Huebner, McGill UniversityTable of ContentsIntroduction Museums Restorations (De)Translations Transitions Resurrections Tragedies Symbols Monuments Quarrels Archaeologies Notes Bibliography Index
£999.99
Boydell & Brewer Ltd A Theory of Music Analysis: On Segmentation and
Book SynopsisA new theory of musical analysis from an award-winning author, with six detailed analyses of works from Beethoven to today. This book introduces a theory of music analysis that one can use to explore aspects of segmentation and associative organization in a wide range of repertoire including Western classical music from the Baroque to the present, withpotential applications to jazz and popular music, and some non-Western musics. Rather than a methodology, the theory provides analysts with precise language and a broad, flexible conceptual framework through which they can formulate and investigate questions of interest and develop their own interpretations of individual pieces and passages. The theory begins with a basic distinction among three domains of musical experience and discourse about it: the sonic (psychoacoustic); the contextual (or associative, sparked by varying degrees of repetition); and the structural (guided by a specific theory of musical structure or syntax invoked by the analyst). A comprehensive presentationof the theory, with copious musical illustrations, is balanced with close analyses of works by Beethoven, Debussy, Nancarrow, Riley, Feldman, and Morris. Dora A. Hanninen is professor of music theory at the Universityof Maryland. She received the 2010 Outstanding Publication Award from the Society for Music Theory.Trade ReviewThe tremendous range of application shows without a doubt that this book achieves its goal of opening new lines of inquiry for individual pieces, repertoires, and issues in contemporary music theory. * JOURNAL OF MUSIC THEORY *The book addresses music theorists, analysts, and musicologists. Could serve as a main reference item in analysis courses. Encompasses a wide range of Western music traditions from the baroque onward. This feature is one among its several qualities of methodological flexibility. Exquisite presentation. Indispensable to the analyst in search of advancing or developing theoretical frameworks. -- Dimitris Exarchos * MUSIC LIBRARY ASSOCIATION NOTES *Rarely does a book come along that is both brilliant and unlike anything else in our field. Rather than offering another new methodology, A Theory of Music Analysis constructs a general framework on which we can locate (and better understand) most of the analytical utterances we make. Replete with diverse and sensitive musical analyses, this is an important work for anyone who engages in music-theoretical pursuits. -- Michael Buchler, Florida State University College of MusicTable of ContentsA Theory of Music Analysis Orientations, Criteria, Segments Associative Sets and Associative Organization Beethoven, Piano Sonata No. 2 in A Major, Op. 2, No. 2, I Debussy, "Harmonie du soir," Cinq poèmes de Baudelaire, No. 2 Nancarrow, Study No. 37: Calibrated Canons, Changeable Landscapes Riley, In C: Configurations and Landscape Studies of Select Plots Feldman, Palais de Mari: Pattern and Design in a Changing Landscape Morris, Nine Piano Pieces: Between Moment and Memory-Reflectionson and among the Nine Further Considerations and Extended Applications Notes Glossary Bibliography Index
£38.00
University Press of Mississippi Rare Birds: Conversations with Legends of Jazz and Classical Music
Book SynopsisRare Birds is a collection of conversations with world-class jazz musicians and classical composers, featuring luminaries Philip Glass, Charles Lloyd, Abdullah Ibrahim, Steve Reich, Eugene Friesen, and Sathima Bea Benjamin. These in-depth, candid interviews focus not only on the music but also on the artists. The six interviews, conducted by poet and author Thomas Rain Crowe and musician Nan Watkins, delve into the creative process, individual as well as global perspectives on the arts, the human condition, and various personal issues that are addressed in the music itself. These cutting-edge artists have singular ideas about what it means to be a composer and musician.An important addition to the documentation of modern jazz musicians and composers, Rare Birds will appeal to anyone who is interested in jazz music or the contemporary classical canon.
£27.96
University Press of Mississippi Folk Music and Modern Sound
Book SynopsisThe essays in this collection range from the impact of technology on the British folksong revival to regional characteristics of early rock and roll in New Orleans. Attention is given to the blues, Sacred Harp singing, ethnic music, both black and white gospel, country music, and the polka. Other essays consider the relationship of music from the Yiddish-American theater with that of Broadway, the wide influence and commercialization of black music in today's popular music, myths about early black music, and Charles Ives as folk hero. Contributors include Amiri Baraka, Doris J. Dyen, Dena J. Epstein, David Evans, Kenneth S. Goldstein, Anthony Heilbut, William Ivey, Charles Keil, A. L. Lloyd, Bill C. Malone, Robert Palmer, Vivian Perlis, Mark Slobin, Richard Spottswood, and Charles K. Wolfe.
£27.96
University Press of Mississippi Music and History: Bridging the Disciplines
Book SynopsisThis book begins with a simple question: Why haven't historians and musicologists been talking to one another? Historians frequently look to all aspects of human activity, including music, in order to better understand the past. Musicologists inquire into the social, cultural, and historical contexts of musical works and musical practices to develop theories about the meanings of compositions and the significance of musical creation. Both disciplines examine how people represent their experiences. This collection of original essays, the first of its kind, argues that the conversation between scholars in the two fields can become richer and more mutually informing. The volume features an eloquent personal essay by historian Lawrence W. Levine, whose work has inspired a whole generation of scholars working on African American music in American history. The first six essays address widely different aspects of musical culture and history ranging from women and popular song during the French Revolution to nineteenth-century music publishing in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Two additional essays by scholars outside of musicology and history represent a new kind of disciplinary bridging by using the methods of cultural studies to look at cross-dressing in nineteenth- and early twentieth-century opera and blues responses to lynching in the New South. The last four essays offer models for collaborative, multidisciplinary research with a special emphasis on popular music. Jeffrey H. Jackson, Memphis, Tennessee, is assistant professor of history at Rhodes College. He is the author of Making Jazz French: Music and Modern Life in Interwar Paris. Stanley C. Pelkey, Portage, Michigan, is assistant professor of music at Western Michigan University. He is a member of the College Music Society, and his work has appeared in music-related periodicals.
£19.96
Kent State University Press Small Town, Big Music: The Outsized Influence of
Book Synopsis2020 IPPY Awards Gold Medali, Great Lakes Best Regional NonfictionRelying on oral histories, hundreds of rare photographs, and original music reviews, this book explores the countercultural fringes of Kent, Ohio, over four decades. Firsthand reminiscences from musicians, promoters, friends, and fans recount arena shows featuring acts like Pink Floyd, The Clash, and Paul Simon as well as the grungy corners of town where Joe Walsh, Patrick Carney, Chrissie Hynde, and DEVO refined their crafts. From back stages, hotel rooms, and the saloons of Kent, readers will travel back in time to the great rockin' nights hosted in this small town.More than just a retrospective on performances that occurred in one midwestern college town, Prufer's book illuminates a fascinating phenomenon: both up-and-coming and major artists knew Kent was a place to play—fertile ground for creativity, spontaneity, and innovation. From the formation of Joe Walsh's first band, The Measles, and the creation of DEVO in Kent State University's art department to original performances of Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon and serendipitous collaborations like Emmylou Harris and Good Company in the Water Street Saloon, the influence of Kent's music scene has been powerful. Previously overshadowed by our attention to Cleveland as a true music epicenter, Prufer's book is an excellent and corrective addition.Extensively researched for eight years and lavishly illustrated, Small Town, Big Music is the most comprehensive telling of any of these stories in one place. Rock historians and fans alike will want to own this book.Trade Review"Kent, Ohio, infamous for the 1970 Kent State University shootings, also spawned a robust and influential music scene. Drawing on vintage concert reviews and firsthand reminiscences, Prufer paints an affectionate picture of a music-hungry community that welcomed artists including Pink Floyd, the Clash, the Replacements, and Bruce Springsteen—as well as hometown heroes Devo and Joe Walsh—often at early, pivotal stages of their careers." —Publishers Weekly "What brought all those people—those artists, photographers, poets, filmmakers, and musicians—together? College. Kent State is what made Kent such a magical place at the time and what continues to make it special. And I would never be able to be where I am now without that experience. It was just a magical time." —Joe Walsh, from the Foreword
£999.99
University of Iowa Press It's Just the Normal Noises: Marcus, Guralnick,
Book SynopsisRoots rock, Americana, alt country: what are they and why do they matter? Americans have been trying to answer these questions for as long as the music bearing these labels has existed. Music can function as an escape from the outside world or as an explanation of that world. Listeners who identify with the music’s message may shape their social understandings accordingly. Rock critics like Greil Marcus and Peter Guralnick, the titans of rock criticism, tap this fluid dichotomy, considering the personal appeal of roots music alongside national ideals of democracy and selfhood. So too do many other critics, novelists, and fans, explaining to themselves and us how music forms our selves and the communities we seek out and build up.In It’s Just the Normal Noises, Timothy Gray examines a wide array of writing about roots music from the 1960s to the 2000s. In addition to chapters on the genre-defining work of Guralnick and Marcus, he explores the influential writings of Grant Alden and Peter Blackstock, the editors of No Depression magazine, and the writers who contributed to its pages, Bill Friskicks-Warren, Ed Ward, David Cantwell, and Allison Stewart among them. A host of memoirists and novelists, from Patti Smith and Ann Powers to Eleanor Henderson and Dana Spiotta, shed light on the social effects and personal attachments of the music’s many manifestations, from punk to alt country to hardcore. The ambivalent attitudes of rock musicians toward success and failure, the meaning of soul, the formation of alternative communities through magazine readership, and the obsession of Generation X scenes with DIY production values wend through these works.Taking a personal approach to the subject matter, Gray reads criticism and listens to music as though rock ‘n’ roll not only explains American culture, but also shores up his life. This book is for everyone who’s heard in roots rock the sound of an individual and a nation singing themselves into being.
£17.05
University of Iowa Press Half a Million Strong: Crowds and Power from
Book SynopsisFrom baby boomers to millennials, attending a big music festival has basically become a cultural rite of passage in America. In Half a Million Strong, music writer and scholar Gina Arnold explores the history of large music festivals in America and examines their impact on American culture. Studying literature, films, journalism, and other archival detritus of the countercultural era, Arnold looks closely at a number of large and well-known festivals, including the Newport Folk Festival, Woodstock, Altamont, Wattstax, the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, Hardly Strictly Bluegrass, and others to map their cultural significance in the American experience. She finds that—far from being the utopian and communal spaces of spiritual regeneration that they claim for themselves— these large music festivals serve mostly to display the free market to consumers in its very best light.
£16.10
University Press of Mississippi He Stopped Loving Her Today: George Jones, Billy Sherrill, and the Pretty-Much Totally True Story of the Making of the Greatest Country Record of All Time
Book SynopsisWhen George Jones recorded ""He Stopped Loving Her Today"" more than thirty years ago, he was a walking disaster. Twin addictions to drugs and alcohol had him drinking Jim Beam by the case and snorting cocaine as long as he was awake. Before it was over, Jones would be bankrupt, homeless, and an unwilling patient at an Alabama mental institution. In the midst of all this chaos, legendary producer Billy Sherrill-the man who discovered Tammy Wynette and cowrote ""Stand by Your Man""-would somehow coax the performance of a lifetime out of the mercurial Jones. The result was a country masterpiece.He Stopped Loving Her Today, the story behind the making of the song often voted the best country song ever by both critics and fans, offers an overview of country music's origins and a search for the music's elusive Holy Grail: authenticity. The schizoid bottom line-even though country music is undeniably a branch of the make believe world of show biz, to fans and scholars alike, authenticity remains the ultimate measure of the music's power.
£31.96
University Press of Mississippi The Berimbau: Soul of Brazilian Music
Book SynopsisThe Brazilian berimbau, a musical bow, is most commonly associated with the energetic martial art/dance/game of capoeira. This study explores the berimbau's stature from the 1950s to the present in diverse musical genres including bossa nova, samba-reggae, MPB (Popular Brazilian Music), electronic dance music, Brazilian art music, and more. Berimbau music spans oral and recorded historical traditions, connects Latin America to Africa, juxtaposes the sacred and profane, and unites nationally constructed notions of Brazilian identity across seemingly impenetrable barriers.The Berimbau: Soul of Brazilian Music is the first work that considers the berimbau beyond the context of capoeira, and explores the bow's emergence as a national symbol. Throughout, this book engages and analyzes intersections of musical traditions in the Black Atlantic, North American popular music, and the rise of global jazz. This book is an accessible introduction to Brazilian music for musicians, Latin American scholars, capoeira practitioners, and other people who are interested in Brazil's music and culture.
£27.96
University Press of Mississippi Exploring American Folk Music: Ethnic,
Book SynopsisExploring American Folk Music: Ethnic, Grassroots, and Regional Traditions in the United States reflects the fascinating diversity of regional and grassroots music in the United States. The book covers the diverse strains of American folk music--Latin, Native American, African, French-Canadian, British, and Cajun--and offers a chronology of the development of folk music in the United States.The book is divided into discrete chapters covering topics as seemingly disparate as sacred harp singing, conjunto music, the folk revival, blues, and ballad singing. It is among the few textbooks in American music that recognizes the importance and contributions of Native Americans as well as those who live, sing, and perform music along our borderlands, from the French speaking citizens in northern Vermont to the extensive Hispanic population living north of the Rio Grande River, recognizing and reflecting the increasing importance of the varied Latino traditions that have informed our folk music since the founding of the United States. Another chapter includes detailed information about the roots of hip hop and this new edition features a new chapter on urban folk music, exploring traditions in our cities, with a case study focusing on Washington, D.C. Exploring American Folk Music also introduces you to such important figures in American music as Bob Wills, Lydia Mendoza, Bob Dylan, and Muddy Waters, who helped shape what America sounds like in the twenty-first century. It also features new sections at the end of each chapter with up-to-date recommendations for ""Suggested Listening,"" ""Suggested Reading,"" and ""Suggested Viewing.""
£27.96
University Press of Mississippi Transatlantic Roots Music: Folk, Blues, and National Identities
Book SynopsisThis book presents a collection of essays on the debates about origins, authenticity, and identity in folk and blues music. The essays had their origins in an international conference on the Transatlantic routes of American roots music, out of which emerged common themes and questions of origins and authenticity in folk music, black and white, American and British. The central theme is musical influences, but issues of identity--national, local, and racial--are also recurring subjects. The extent to which these identities were invented, imagined, or constructed by the performers, or by those who recorded their work for posterity, is also a prominent concern and questions of racial identity are particularly central. The book features a new essay on the blues by Paul Oliver alongside an essay on Oliver's seminal blues scholarship. There are also several essays on British blues and the links between performers and styles in the United States and Britain and new essays on critical figures such as Alan Lomax and Woody Guthrie. This volume uniquely offers perspectives from both sides of the Atlantic on the connections and interplay of influences in roots music and the debates about these subjects drawing on the work of eminent established scholars and emerging young academics who are already making a contribution to the field. Throughout, the contributors offer the most recent scholarship available on key issues.
£81.75
University Press of Mississippi Saved by Song: A History of Gospel and Christian
Book SynopsisSaved by Song returns to print with its sweeping overview of the history of gospel music. Powerful and incisive, the book traces contemporary Christianity and Christian music to the sixteenth century and the Protestant Reformation after examining music in the Bible and early church.In America, gospel music has been divided between white and black gospel. Within these divisions are further divisions: southern gospel, contemporary Christian music, spirituals, and hymns. Don Cusic has provided background and insight into the developments of all these rich facets of gospel music. From the psalms of the early Puritans through the hymns of Isaac Watts and the social activism of the Wesleys, to the camp meeting songs of the Kentucky Revival, the spirituals that came from the slave culture, and the hymns from the great revival after the Civil War, gospel music advanced through the nineteenth century. The twentieth century brought the technologies of recordings and the electronic media to gospel music.Saved by Song is ultimately the definitive and complete history of a uniquely American art form. It is a must for anyone interested in the musical and spiritual life of a nation.
£27.96
University Press of Mississippi That's Got 'Em!: The Life and Music of Wilbur C. Sweatman
Book SynopsisWilbur C. Sweatman (1882-1961) is one of the most important, yet unheralded, African American musicians involved in the transition of ragtime into jazz in the early twentieth century. In That's Got 'Em!, Mark Berresford tracks this energetic pioneer over a seven-decade career. His talent transformed every genre of black music before the advent of rock and roll--""pickaninny"" bands, minstrelsy, circus sideshows, vaudeville (both black and white), night clubs, and cabarets. Sweatman was the first African American musician to be offered a long-term recording contract, and he dazzled listeners with jazz clarinet solos before the Original Dixieland Jazz Band's so-called ""first jazz records.""Sweatman toured the vaudeville circuit for over twenty years and presented African American music to white music lovers without resorting to the hitherto obligatory ""plantation"" costumes and blackface makeup. His bands were a fertile breeding ground of young jazz talent, featuring such future stars as Duke Ellington, Coleman Hawkins, and Jimmie Lunceford. Sweatman subsequently played pioneering roles in radio and recording production. His high profile and sterling reputation in both the black and white entertainment communities made him a natural choice for administering the estate of Scott Joplin and other notable black performers and composers.That's Got 'Em! is the first full-length biography of this pivotal figure in black popular culture, providing a compelling account of his life and times.
£27.96
University Press of Mississippi Creating Jazz Counterpoint: New Orleans, Barbershop Harmony, and the Blues
Book SynopsisThe book Jazzmen (1939) claimed New Orleans as the birthplace of jazz and introduced the legend of Buddy Bolden as the ""First Man of Jazz."" Much of the information that the book relied on came from a highly controversial source: Bunk Johnson. He claimed to have played with Bolden and that together they had pioneered jazz. Johnson made many recordings talking about and playing the music of the Bolden era. These recordings have been treated with skepticism because of doubts about Johnson's credibility. Using oral histories, the Jazzmen interview notes, and unpublished archive material, this book confirms that Bunk Johnson did play with Bolden. This confirmation, in turn, has profound implications for Johnson's recorded legacy in describing the music of the early years of New Orleans jazz. New Orleans jazz was different from ragtime in a number of ways. It was a music that was collectively improvised, and it carried a new tonality--the tonality of the blues. How early jazz musicians improvised together and how the blues became a part of jazz has until now been a mystery. Part of the reason New Orleans jazz developed as it did is that all the prominent jazz pioneers, including Buddy Bolden, Bunk Johnson, Louis Armstrong, Sidney Bechet, Johnny Dodds, and Kid Ory, sang in barbershop (or barroom) quartets. This book describes in both historical and musical terms how the practices of quartet singing were converted to the instruments of a jazz band, and how this, in turn, produced collectively improvised, blues-inflected jazz, that unique sound of New Orleans.
£81.75
University of Tennessee Press The Story of the Dulcimer
Book SynopsisPerhaps no instrument better represents the music of Appalachia than the fretted dulcimer. The instrument was no longer confined to back porches and local music halls when Jean Ritchie so melodically thrust herself and her dulcimer into the national limelight during the folk revival of the 1950s. But where did the dulcimer, known to exist in no other folk culture in the world, come from?In The Story of the Dulcimer, Ralph Lee Smith traces the dulcimer’s beginnings back to European immigration to America in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. As German immigrants settled in Pennsylvania and Appalachia, they brought with them scheitholts, a type of northern European fretted zither. As German immigrants intermingled with English and Scotch-Irish immigrants, the scheitholt, which was customarily played to a slower tempo in German cultural music, began to be musically integrated into the faster tempos of English and Scotch-Irish ballads and folk songs. As Appalachia absorbed an increasing flow of English and Scotch-Irish immigrants and the musical traditions they brought with them, the scheitholt steadily evolved into an instrument that reflected this folk music amalgamation, and the modern dulcimer was born.In this second edition, Smith brings the dulcimer’s history into the twenty-first century with a new preface and updates to the original edition. Copiously illustrated with images of both antique scheitholts and contemporary dulcimers, The Story of the Dulcimer is a testament to the enduring musical heritage of Appalachia and solves one of the region’s musical mysteries.
£20.21
University of Tennessee Press Cool Wooden Box: Transformation of the American
Book SynopsisBeginning with a comparison of the American acoustic guitar world in the early 1960s with that of today, then describing iconic performances at storied venues such as The Ark in Ann Arbor while meticulously researching the instrument’s top makers, Smith assembles a passion-filled and eye-opening history of that “cool wooden box” from the folk era through the pandemic. The author focuses on both the playing and making of the acoustic guitar, concluding that the instrument has been transformed in both aspects during the last sixty years. On the playing side, Smith examines the influences on, and the impact of, such guitarists as David Bromberg, Elizabeth Cotten, Paul Geremia, and Norman Blake. On the making side, the author takes the reader into the tradition-minded yet dynamic world of lutherie. He traces how the oldest, most revered companies whose reputations are based on legendary breakthroughs in lutherie, Gibson and Martin, have adapted as the new lutherie movement of innovative small-scale producers, exemplified by interviewees such as Michael Gurian, Bill Collings, Richard Hoover, and Dana Bourgeois, arose. Starting small and then growing exponentially, Taylor Guitars is a wholly different “player” in acoustic guitar building, and Smith compellingly tells its story. Finally, Cool Wooden Box considers the effects of globalization on the industry.Clocking thousands of miles and hours of interviews with guitar makers, suppliers, and sellers, W. Rand Smith has created not only a detailed history of the acoustic guitar, but also a lasting tribute to an instrument he so clearly reveres.Trade ReviewAfter coming out of the disco . . . era, when people rediscovered how cool that wooden box is, they just keep rediscovering it." —Christopher F. Martin IV, CEO, C. F. Martin Co."There are books on acoustic guitars, acoustic guitar players, and acoustic guitar makers, but Rand Smith brings them all together for the first time as he explores and explains the evolutionary Big Bang that the acoustic guitar has undergone in the last five decades. An important work—and entertaining, too." —Walter Carter, founder, Carter Vintage Guitars
£26.36
University Press of Mississippi Alan Lomax, Assistant in Charge: The Library of Congress Letters, 1935–1945
Book SynopsisAlan Lomax (1915-2002) began working for the Archive of American Folk Song at the Library of Congress in 1936, first as a special and temporary assistant, then as the permanent Assistant in Charge, starting in June 1937, until he left in late 1942. He recorded such important musicians as Woody Guthrie, Muddy Waters, Aunt Molly Jackson, and Jelly Roll Morton. A reading and examination of his letters from 1935 to 1945 reveal someone who led an extremely complex, fascinating, and creative life, mostly as a public employee. While Lomax is noted for his field recordings, these collected letters, many signed ""Alan Lomax, Assistant in Charge,"" are a trove of information until now available only at the Library of Congress. They make it clear that Lomax was very interested in the commercial hillbilly, race, and even popular recordings of the 1920s and after. These letters serve as a way of understanding Lomax's public and private life during some of his most productive and significant years. Lomax was one of the most stimulating and influential cultural workers of the twentieth century. Here he speaks for himself through his voluminous correspondence.
£27.96
University Press of Mississippi Transatlantic Roots Music: Folk, Blues, and National Identities
Book SynopsisTransatlantic Roots Music presents a collection of essays on the debates about origins, authenticity, and identity in folk and blues music. These essays originated in an international conference on the Transatlantic paths of American roots music, out of which emerged common themes and questions of origins and authenticity in folk music, be it black or white, American or British. While the central theme of the collection is musical influences, issues of national, local, and racial identity are also recurring subjects. Were these identities invented, imagined, constructed by the performers, or by those who recorded the music for posterity?The book features a new essay on the blues by Paul Oliver alongside an essay on Oliver's seminal blues scholarship. There are also several essays on British blues and the links between performers and styles in the United States and Britain. And there are new essays on critical figures such as Alan Lomax and Woody Guthrie.This volume uniquely offers perspectives from both sides of the Atlantic on the interplay of influences in roots music and the debates about these subjects. The book draws on the work of eminent, established scholars and emerging, young academics who are already making a contribution to the field. Throughout, contributors offer the most recent scholarship available on key issues.
£27.96
University Press of Mississippi The Music of the Netherlands Antilles: Why Eleven Antilleans Knelt before Chopin's Heart
Book SynopsisThe Music of the Netherlands Antilles: Why Eleven Antilleans Knelt before Chopin's Heart is not your usual musical scholarship. In October 1999, eleven Antilleans attended the service held to commemorate the 150th anniversary of Frédéric Chopin's death. This service, held in the Warsaw church where the composer's heart is kept in an urn, was an opportunity for these Antilleans to express their debt of gratitude to Chopin, whose influence is central to Antillean music history. Press coverage of this event caused Dutch novelist and author Jan Brokken (b. 1949) to start writing this book, based on notes he took while living on Curaçao from 1993 to 2002.Anyone hoping to discover an overlooked chapter of Caribbean music and music history will be amply rewarded with this Dutch-Caribbean perspective on the pan-Caribbean process of creolization. On Curaçao, the history and legacy of slavery shaped culture and music, affecting all the New World. Brokken's portraits of prominent Dutch Antillean composers are interspersed with cultural and music history. He puts the Dutch Caribbean's contributions into a broader context by also examining the nineteenth-century works by pianist Louis Moreau Gottschalk from New Orleans and Manuel Saumell from Cuba. Brokken explores the African component of Dutch Antillean music--examining the history of the rhythm and music known as tambú as well as American jazz pianist Chick Corea's fascination with the tumba rhythm from Curaçao. The book ends with a discussion of how recent Dutch Caribbean adaptations of European dance forms have shifted from a classical approach to contemporary forms of Latin jazz.
£81.75
University Press of Mississippi Songs of Sorrow: Lucy McKim Garrison and Slave
Book SynopsisIn the spring of 1862, Lucy McKim, the nineteen-year-old daughter of a Philadelphia abolitionist Quaker family, traveled with her father to the Sea Islands of South Carolina to aid him in his efforts to organize humanitarian aid for thousands of newly freed slaves. During her stay she heard the singing of the slaves in their churches, as they rowed their boats from island to island, and as they worked and played. Already a skilled musician, she determined to preserve as much of the music as she could, quickly writing down words and melodies, some of them only fleeting improvisations. Upon her return to Philadelphia, she began composing musical settings for the songs and in the fall of 1862 published the first serious musical arrangements of slave songs. She also wrote about the musical characteristics of slave songs, and published, in a leading musical journal of the time, the first article to discuss what she had witnessed.In Songs of Sorrow renowned music scholar Samuel Charters tells McKim's personal story. Letters reveal the story of young women's lives during the harsh years of the war. At the same time that her arrangements of the songs were being published, a man with whom she had an unofficial ""attachment"" was killed in battle, and the war forced her to temporarily abandon her work.In 1865 she married Wendell Phillips Garrison, son of abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison, and in the early months of their marriage she proposed that they turn to the collection of slave songs that had long been her dream. She and her husband--a founder and literary editor of the recently launched journal The Nation--enlisted the help of two associates who had also collected songs in the Sea Islands. Their book, Slave Songs of the United States, appeared in 1867. After a long illness, ultimately ending in paralysis, she died at the age of thirty-four in 1877. This book reclaims the story of a pioneer in ethnomusicology, one whose influential work affected the Fisk Jubilee Singers and many others.
£76.86
Boydell & Brewer Ltd A Companion to Sound in German-Speaking Cultures
Book SynopsisExplores sonic events and auditory experiences in German-speaking contexts from the Middle Ages to the digital age, opening up new understandings. As a sub-discipline of cultural studies, sound studies is a firmly established field of inquiry, examining how sonic events and auditory experiences unfold in culturally and historically contingent life situations. Responding to new questions in sound studies in the context of German-speaking cultures, and incorporating up-to-date methodologies, this Companion explores the significance of sound from the Middle Ages and the classical-romantic period through high-capitalist industrial modernity, the Nazi period and the Holocaust, and postwar Germany to the present digital age. The volume examines how sonic events are represented in literary fiction, radio productions, cinema, newsreels, documentaries, sound art, museum exhibitions, and other media, drawing for this inquiry on philosophy, aesthetics, literary criticism, musicology, art theory, and cultural studies. Each essay is a case study - of persons, events, and sonic, visual, or textual artifacts - situating them in wider contexts of culture, history, and politics. The volume not only revisits well-known topics from new angles, but seeks especially to explore neglected issues on the cultural periphery. It assembles original essays by leaders in the field and emerging scholars from the United States and Europe. Offering an advanced introduction to the topic, the Companion is addressed to anyone interested in how the analysis of sound phenomena opens up new understandings of German-speaking cultures.Table of ContentsList of Illustrations Preface Introduction Rolf J. Goebel Part I. Sonic Practices from the Middle Ages to the Nineteenth Century 1: Soundscapes in Medieval German Literature Albrecht Classen 2: A German Dance: Music, Mesmerism, and the Glass Armonica Lawrence Kramer 3: Healthy Throats, German Sounds: Women's Vocal Development and Expertise in German Soundscapes of the Long Nineteenth Century Josephine Hoegaerts Part II. Rediscovering the Sounds of Modernism 4: Heidegger: A Little Hint on How to Listen James M. Kopf 5: New Hearing: Soundscapes of Literary Modernism Frieder von Ammon 6: Tragic Silence and Heroic Clamor: Sound Worlds and Constructed Ethnographies in Fritz Lang's Die Nibelungen (1924) Daniel Sherer Part III. Listening to the Unbearable: The Sounds of National Socialism and the Holocaust 7: Hitler's Voice: Media and Politics of Embodiment Tyler Whitney 8: "The whole language was a scream": The German Language During the Seizure of the Jews Sara Ann Sewell Part IV. After the Catastrophe: Sounds in Postwar Germany and Beyond 9: Revisiting the Soundscapes of Postwar West German Radio Drama Caroline A. Kita 10: Jazz and Its Effect on Politics and Modernity as Presented in German Newsreels and Documentaries of the 1960s Sigrun Lehnert 11: On the Air: Clandestine Radiophonic Protest Groups in Italy, Switzerland, and Germany, 1976-77 Anna Bromley 12: Kittler's Sound Larson Powell 13: Clearing the Throat, Stumbling, and Coughing: An Anthropology of the Sonic Corpus According to Carlfriedrich Claus Holger Schulze Part V. Sounds of the Present 14: Carsten Nicolai's Art of Disturbance: Sound, Science, and Interference Lutz Koepnick 15: Echoes of the Past: Sound in the History Museum Daniel Morat 16: (Post)Digital Sounds: Acoustic Experiments in the Age of Algorithmic Processes Christiane Heibach Part Vi. Epilogue 17: The Sound of Pine Needles Falling: The Art of Max Neuhaus Yehuda Safran Select Bibliography and List of Further Reading Notes on the Contributors Index
£89.10
University of Delaware Press Literature and the Arts: Interdisciplinary Essays
Book SynopsisThe ten essays in Literature and the Arts explore the intermedial plenitude of eighteenth-century English culture, honoring the memory of James Anderson Winn, whose work demonstrated how seeing that interplay of the arts and literature was essential to a full understanding of Restoration and eighteenth-century English culture. Scenery, machinery, music, dance, and texts transformed one another, both enriching and complicating generic distinctions. Artists were alive to the power of the arts to reflect and shape reality, and their audience was quick to turn to the arts as performative pleasures and critical lenses through which to understand a changing world. This collection's eminent authors discuss estate design, musicalized theater, the visual spectacle of musical performance, stage machinery and set designs, the social uses of painting and singing, drama’s reflection of a transformed military infrastructure, and the arts of memory and of laughter.Table of Contents Acknowledgments vii Introduction ANNA BATTIGELLI 1 Laughter from on High: The Arts of Contempt in Restoration England STEVEN N. ZWICKER 2 Staging Davenant; or, Macbeth, the Musical AMANDA EUBANKS WINKLER 3 The Arts of Memory in Absalom and Achitophel: Dryden’s Response to Milton and Marvell PAUL HAMMOND 4 Peacocks and Rainbows: Visual Spectacle and Allegorical Performance in Albion and Albanius ANDREW R. WALKLING 5 “The Dyrham Decades”: The Cultural Connections of an English Country House, 1690–1720 DAVID HOPKINS 6 Domenico Scarlatti: “Jesting with Art” CEDRIC D. REVERAND II 7 Queen Anne’s Other Women PAULA R. BACKSCHEIDER 8 Anne Donnellan: Friend of the Arts ELLEN T. HARRIS 9 Responding to Emma in 1816: Reviewers, Readers,and “Opinions” PETER SABOR 10 Elizabeth Rivers and Christopher Smart: Eighteenth-Century Poetry across Time and Form MELISSA SCHOENBERGER Selected Bibliography Notes on Contributors Index
£32.30
University of Delaware Press Literature and the Arts: Interdisciplinary Essays
Book SynopsisThe ten essays in Literature and the Arts explore the intermedial plenitude of eighteenth-century English culture, honoring the memory of James Anderson Winn, whose work demonstrated how seeing that interplay of the arts and literature was essential to a full understanding of Restoration and eighteenth-century English culture. Scenery, machinery, music, dance, and texts transformed one another, both enriching and complicating generic distinctions. Artists were alive to the power of the arts to reflect and shape reality, and their audience was quick to turn to the arts as performative pleasures and critical lenses through which to understand a changing world. This collection's eminent authors discuss estate design, musicalized theater, the visual spectacle of musical performance, stage machinery and set designs, the social uses of painting and singing, drama’s reflection of a transformed military infrastructure, and the arts of memory and of laughter.Table of Contents Acknowledgments vii Introduction ANNA BATTIGELLI 1 Laughter from on High: The Arts of Contempt in Restoration England STEVEN N. ZWICKER 2 Staging Davenant; or, Macbeth, the Musical AMANDA EUBANKS WINKLER 3 The Arts of Memory in Absalom and Achitophel: Dryden’s Response to Milton and Marvell PAUL HAMMOND 4 Peacocks and Rainbows: Visual Spectacle and Allegorical Performance in Albion and Albanius ANDREW R. WALKLING 5 “The Dyrham Decades”: The Cultural Connections of an English Country House, 1690–1720 DAVID HOPKINS 6 Domenico Scarlatti: “Jesting with Art” CEDRIC D. REVERAND II 7 Queen Anne’s Other Women PAULA R. BACKSCHEIDER 8 Anne Donnellan: Friend of the Arts ELLEN T. HARRIS 9 Responding to Emma in 1816: Reviewers, Readers,and “Opinions” PETER SABOR 10 Elizabeth Rivers and Christopher Smart: Eighteenth-Century Poetry across Time and Form MELISSA SCHOENBERGER Selected Bibliography Notes on Contributors Index
£107.20
Boydell & Brewer Ltd Bernstein and Robbins: The Early Ballets
Book SynopsisThe formative early ballets of West Side Story creators Leonard Bernstein and Jerome Robbins explored in detail for the very first time. 2022 CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title Winner. Leonard Bernstein and choreographer Jerome Robbins stand as giants of the musical-theatre world, but it was ballet that launched their stage careers and established their relationship. With Fancy Free (1944), their triumphant debut collaboration produced by Ballet Theatre, Bernstein, Robbins, and set designer Oliver Smith-all in their mid-twenties- captured the spirit of wartime New York, created a defining ballet of the period still widely performed today, and became overnight sensations. The hit musical On the Town (1944) and a now largely forgotten ballet, Facsimile (1946), followed over the next two years. Drawing extensively on previously unpublished archival documents, Bernstein and Robbins: The Early Ballets provides a richly detailed and original historical account of the creation, premiere, and reception of Fancy Free and Facsimile. It reveals the vital and sometimes conflicting role of Ballet Theatre, explores how Bernstein composed the scores, sheds light on the central importance of Oliver Smith, and considers the legacy of these works for all involved. The result is a new understanding of Bernstein, Robbins, and this formative period in their lives.Trade ReviewFor choreographers interested in commissioning scores for their dance pieces, the information contained in this book is very useful. -- Mark Kappel * NEWSNOTES DANCE BLOG *This very interesting book primarily relates the early partnership of Leonard Bernstein and Jerome Robbins. I enjoyed Redfern's...discussion of the staging and choreography of the various shows. The author wisely includes a discussion of Bernstein's ability to work quickly on theatrical assignments and Robbins's legendary rehearsal requirements, and how that affected their relationship. This book offers corrections to...prior information and presents the ballet information with enough detail to better appreciate the music and choreography. * AMERICAN RECORD GUIDE *Sophie Redfern's new book on Leonard Bernstein and Jerome Robbins provides a rich portrait of their collaborative relationship [and] the first in-depth, published analysis of their ballets. Her book adds many insights into the working relationship between these two influential figures. A fascinating narrative arc emerges. Redfern's book is important reading for scholars...who want to think more deeply about collaborative relationships between composers and choreographers. * STUDIES IN MUSICAL THEATRE *Sophie Redfern's groundbreaking and compelling new book offers a vivid account of the often high-octane collaboration between Leonard Bernstein and the choreographer Jerome Robbins-and to a lesser extent, the theatre designer Oliver Smith. . . . [A] manifestly important book that will undoubtedly establish itself as a classic text in the fields of both Bernstein and ballet studies, and which is distinguished throughout by its expert interweaving of historical narrative, source studies, music analysis, and criticism. -- Mervyn Cooke * MUSIC & LETTERS *Rich [archival] materials and Redfern's thorough analysis of Bernstein's music constructively articulate how each artist's individual contributions defined the futures of both ballet and musical theater in the United States...Some of the most compelling highlight Bernstein's adaptation of popular and Latin music into the classical French structure of ballet. Fancy Free's inclusion of defined character motifs, stacked ostinatos, tone rows, and rhythmic complexity would give American ballet a definitive form. * SOCIETY FOR AMERICAN MUSIC BULLETIN *Table of ContentsIntroduction Setting the Scene: American Ballet and Jerome Robbins Towards a First Ballet: Fancy Free Takes Shape Creating Fancy Free: A Long-Distance Collaboration The Music of Fancy Free: The Sketches and Score Explored The Fancy Free Premiere and a Move to Broadway Towards a Second Ballet: Bye Bye Jackie and the Creation of Facsimile The Music of Facsimile: The Sketches and Score Explored The Facsimile Premiere and Legacy of the Ballets Epilogue: Bernstein and Dance Bibliography Index
£89.25
Texas A&M University Press Riders in the Sky
Book Synopsis
£21.84
Bucknell University Press,U.S. Women and Music in the Age of Austen
Book SynopsisWomen and Music in the Age of Austen highlights the central role women played in musical performance, composition, reception, and representation, and analyzes its formative and lasting effect on Georgian culture. This interdisciplinary collection of essays from musicology, literary studies, and gender studies challenges the conventional historical categories that marginalize women’s experience from Austen’s time. Contesting the distinctions between professional and amateur musicians, public and domestic sites of musical production, and performers and composers of music, the contributors reveal how women’s widespread involvement in the Georgian musical scene allowed for self-expression, artistic influence, and access to communities that transcended the boundaries of gender, class, and nationality. This volume’s breadth of focus advances our understanding of a period that witnessed a musical flourishing, much of it animated by female hands and voices. Published by Bucknell University Press. Distributed worldwide by Rutgers University Press. Trade Review“Women and Music in the Age of Austen offers an expansive, lively, colourful view of the gendered musical practices of the eighteenth century and the Romantic period. These essays enrich our knowledge of the musical world of Jane Austen and Frances Burney while shining a spotlight on little-known female performers, critics, composers, consumers, collectors, fans, and musical entrepreneurs of the preceding decades.” -- Angela Esterhammer * author of Print and Performance in the 1820s: Improvisation, Speculation, Identity *“Finding inspiration in a broad range of sources, the volume reflects on women and their musical activities in Georgian England. A focus on Jane Austen and her novels moves in and out of the picture, amplified and receding against historical figures known and unknown. Through these essays by musically-informed literary scholars and musicologists, readers get a sense of the possibilities and desires of women engaged with music over a historical period that brackets the life of our beloved Jane.” -- Maribeth Clark * coeditor of Musicology and Dance: Historical and Critical Perspectives *“Music was important to Jane Austen, as her novels and letters attest, and women played a hitherto undervalued part in the musical world of her time. This sparkling and substantial collection of interdisciplinary essays illuminates Austen’s fiction and her age in many original and surprising ways.” -- Peter Sabor * coeditor of Jane Austen's Manuscript Works *Table of ContentsIllustrations Table Acknowledgements Abbreviations Introduction: “It was all in harmony”: Musical Women in Austen’s Culture Linda Zionkowski with Miriam F. Hart Part I: Representing the Female Performer Chapter 1: A Musical Room of Her Own: Musical Spaces in Jane Austen’s Novels Pierre Dubois Chapter 2: “Prima la musica”: Gentry Daughters at Play in Town, Country, and Continent, 1815-1825 Kelly M. McDonald Chapter 3: Stage Fright: Female Musicians Crossing Musical Borders in Thicknesse’s The School for Fashion and Burney’s The Wanderer Danielle Grover Part II: Women and the Market in Music Chapter 4: Women on the Title Page: Celebrity Endorsement of Musical Scores Penelope Cave Chapter 5: The Lady’s Choice: Women and the Purchase of Music through Subscription Simon D. I. Fleming Chapter 6: Female Musical Entrepreneurship in the Eighteenth Century Alison C. DeSimone Part III: Women as Critics and Fans Chapter 7: Women as Quiet Critics Jane Girdham Chapter 8: Femininity and Foreignness in George Colman’s Farce, The Musical Lady Leslie Ritchie Chapter 9: Georgian Fangirls: Women and Castrati in Eighteenth-Century London Jeffrey A. Nigro Part IV: Women and the Bardic Tradition Chapter 10: Anna Gordon and the Ballad Collectors Ruth Perry Chapter 11: Antiquaries, Female Harpists, and the Survival of the Bardic Tradition Devon R. Nelson Part V: Revisiting the Age of Austen Chapter 12: “That Ecstatic Delight”: Gender and Performance in Adaptations of Sense and Sensibility Gayle Magee Chapter 13: “Here’s harmony!”: Music and Gender in Kirke Mechem’s Pride & Prejudice (2019) and Jonathan Dove’s Mansfield Park (2011) Juliette Wells Bibliography Notes on Contributors Index
£116.80
£23.36
Wilfrid Laurier University Press Mapping Canadas Music
Book SynopsisMapping Canada?s Music is a selection of writings by the late Canadian music librarian and historian Helmut Kallmann (1922?2012). Most of the essays deal with aspects of Canadian music, but some are also autobiographical, including one written during retirement in which Kallmann recalls growing up in a middle-class Jewish family in 1930s Berlin under the spectre of Nazism.Of the seventeen selected writings by Kallmann, five have never before been published; many of the others are from difficult-to-locate sources. They include critical and research essays, reports, reflections, and memoirs. Each chapter is prefaced with an introduction by the editors. Two initial chapters offer a biography of Kallmann and an assessment of his contributions to Canadian music.The variety, breadth, and scope of these writings confirm Kallmann?s pioneering role in Canadian music research and the importance of his legacy to the cultural life of his adopted country. In the current climate of cuts to archival collections and services, the publication of these essays by and about a pre-eminent collector and historian serves as a timely reminder of the importance of cultural memory.
£32.24
Reaktion Books Richard Wagner
Book SynopsisWith their complex textures, rich harmonies and elaborate use of leitmotifs, the operas of Richard Wagner (1813 - 83) remain some of the most influential - and contentious - in the history of the genre. But while Wagner won enormous renown for what he achieved on the stage, his life was marked by political exile, turbulent love affairs, and intermittent poverty. And because Wagner and his music are exceedingly intertwined with the great upheavals of his time, it is difficult to produce an impartial assessment of his work. Published at the bicentennial of his birth, Raymond Furness's Richard Wagner provides a clear and balanced view of both Wagner's great successes and the controversies generated by his life and art. Using Wagner's wide-ranging engagement with Germanic mythology and folk traditions as a starting point, this book explores the composer's music and prose writings, delving deeply into Wagner's essential operas, such as The Ring and Tristan and Isolde, and offering new insights. Because the great operatic pieces often overshadow the rest of Wagner's compositions, Furness also considers neglected fragments like Wieland the Smith, The Mines at Falun and The Visitors, producing a more rounded critical picture of the composer. With up-to-date dissections of recent Bayreuth productions and a refreshingly uncluttered approach to a much-misunderstood life, this book is a rewarding investigation of a true titan of European music.
£15.79
Boydell & Brewer Ltd Creating Der Rosenkavalier: From Chevalier to
Book SynopsisA full account of the making, during 1909-10, of Der Rosenkavalier with emphasis on its derivation from a French opérette of 1907, L'Ingenu libertin. L'Ingenu libertin was seen in Paris by Count Harry Kessler and formed the basis of the opera then to be written by Hofmannsthal and Strauss. Previous scholarship has credited the narrative and characters of Der Rosenkavalier to much older French sources known to and studied by Hofmannsthal, but this book shows clearly how every element in L'Ingenu libertin is in fact taken (and transformed) by Kessler and Hofmannsthal into the work that made fortunes for Hofmannsthal and Strauss, but left Kessler on the sidelines. Michael Reynolds casts a major new light on Strauss's most popular operatic success, highlighting in particular how it was that Hofmannsthal - who had not until then had any theatrical success as an original playwright - was advised and empowered by Kessler to produce a work that succeeded onstage from its very first performance and went rapidly on to conquer the stages of the world. Michael Reynolds is an established writer on opera, a translator and an online music critic, an interest that he sustained throughout thirty years in the world of international diplomacy. His previous book for Boydell, About Suffolk, was an anthology of writing about his adopted county.Trade ReviewReynolds's book will reward both scholars and opera-lovers who are interested in Der Rosenkavalier's co-creators or are fascinated by collaboration and the creative process. * MUSIC LIBRARY ASSOCIATION NOTES *The 'Preface' to Michael Reynolds's charming book begins with a pithy statement: 'This is a book about creation, authorship and relationships'. Thus, in a nutshell, he lays out succinctly the course his monograph takes from uncovering a largely overlooked backstory to the creation of one of the most successful operas of the twentieth century. He presents a detailed account of the nature and origins of its authorship via a considered and sensitively pitched examination of the artistic relationships that underpinned it. * MUSIC AND LETTERS *If you love Der Rosenkavalier, Reynolds' book is essential-and fascinating-reading. Exoticandirrational Blog * . *This newly released paperback edition of Michael Reynolds' 2016 beautiful hardcover book will contain much that is news to fans - and who isn't? - of Richard Strauss' opera Der Rosenkavalier. * Limelight *Table of ContentsOverture Beginners On the page... ...and onto the stage Act One:The Young Libertine Act Two: Who was Harry Kessler? Act Three in two scenes and an Epilogue: Creating Der Rosenkavalier Scene One - devising the scenario Scene Two - characterisation and authorship Epilogue Creating Der Rosenkavalier - a retrospective Bibliography
£999.99
Boydell & Brewer Ltd George Smart and Nineteenth-Century London
Book SynopsisThe first full length study of Sir George Thomas Smart (1776-1867), musical animateur and early champion of the music of Beethoven Sir George Thomas Smart (1776-1867) was a significant musical animateur of the early nineteenth century, who earned his living primarily as a conductor but was also significant as an organist, composer and recorder of events. Smart established successful and pioneering London concert series, was a prime mover in the setting up of the Philharmonic Society and the Royal Academy of Music, and taught many of the leading singers of the day, being well versed in the Handelian concert tradition. He also conducted the opera at the Covent Garden Theatre and introduced significant new works to the public - he was most notably an early champion of the music of Beethoven. His journeys to Europe, and his contacts with the leading European musical figures of the day (including Weber, Meyerbeer, Spohr, and Mendelssohn), were crucial to the direction music was to take in nineteenth-century Britain. This detailed account of Smart's life and career presents him within the context of the vibrant concert life of London and wider European musical culture. It is the first full length, critical study of this influential musical figure. JOHN CARNELLEY is Deputy Director of Music and Head of Academic Music, Dulwich College, London. He holds a PhD in Historical Musicology from the University of London (Goldsmiths College) and has previously published research on the eighteenth-century organ manuscripts of John Reading, held in the Dulwich College Archive.Trade ReviewThis book has been written with warmth and enthusiasm underpinned by exhaustive research. Setting out as a record of the everyday working life of an individual professional musician, it is ultimately and important biography of an exceptional man. * NINETEENTH-CENTURY MUSIC REVIEW *Certainly deserves a place on the shelves of every respectable music library. * BRIO *Sympathetic and intensively researched volume will do much to restore [Sir George Smart's] reputation. * THE MUSICAL TIMES *[A] very rich trove here: the book is an invaluable source of reference for this period and for contemporary research on it. * MUSIC & LETTERS *A fascinating glimpse into a little known but immensely influential era of British musical life. * AMERICAN RECORD GUIDE *Conductor Sir George Smart dominated musical life in London in the 1820s and 1830s. In this biography, Carnelley . . . details Smart's life and his role in the London concert scene. Though events such as Weber's and Mendelssohn's London visits have been previously documented, Carnelley is the first to place those special occasions in the context of routine musical life . . . and Smart's attempts to broaden musical tastes . . . . Summing Up: Recommended. * CHOICE *Table of ContentsPreface George Smart and the Musical Profession: 1776-1825 London Concert Life 1800-25 George Smart's Concert Activities 1800-25 Interlude - London and the Continent in 1825 New Musical Directions 1826-30 Change and Conflict 1830-44 Retirement and Old Age 1844-1867 Appendices Bibliography
£80.75
Boydell & Brewer Ltd The New Percy Grainger Companion
Book SynopsisA new collection with contributions from performing musicians and Grainger scholars and a detailed Catalogue of Works. In the thirty years since his Centenary in 1982 it has become even clearer that Percy Grainger [1882-1961] - composer, pianist and revolutionary - was a man born out of his time. Many of his ideas, both musical and social, sit farmore easily in our contemporary world. Those thirty years have also seen a notable expansion of interest in Grainger's music. Innumerable recordings have been made, including the first complete Grainger recording survey by Chandos in its monumental Grainger Edition. The growth of the internet has made it possible, as never before, for Grainger's music to be heard widely. The central theme of The New Percy Grainger Companion is to give information and help from established musicians for performing and listening to this life-celebrating repertoire. The Companion's fully detailed, up-to-date Catalogue of Works - the most complete of any existing catalogue - givesinvaluable assistance. Authoritative contextual chapters in the Companion offer some surprising new background information, together with thoughtful evaluations which signal a new twenty-first century perspective in Grainger scholarship. PENELOPE THWAITES is recognised internationally as a leading Grainger exponent. Her research, performances and extensive Grainger discography over four decades reflect a unique understanding of the manand his music. Contributors: BRIAN ALLISON, TERESA BALOUGH, ROGER COVELL, KAY DREYFUS, LEWIS FOREMAN, PAUL JACKSON, JAMES JUDD, JAMES KOEHNE, ASTRID BRITT KRAUTSCHNEIDER, BARRY PETER OULD, STEWART MANVILLE, MURRAY MCLACHLAN, TIMOTHY REYNISH, BRUCE CLUNIES ROSS, DESMOND SCOTT, PETER SCULTHORPE, GEOFFREY SIMON, RONALD STEVENSON, STEPHEN VARCOE, DAVID WALKERTrade ReviewAn essential handbook for anyone doing research on Percy Grainger himself, on the musical world of his time, or on the types and forms of music which he wrote or researched...handbooks such as this provide the folklorist with the background to understanding the life and work of a figure who had a deep interest in folk music and the music of the non-Western world. * FOLKLORE *A highly readable and important volume. [It will] prove invaluable to both performers and researchers in years to come. * BRITISH MUSIC SOCIETY *The New Percy Grainger Companion [...] does Grainger's legacy a great service because of the rich, and at times unexpected, contexts against which the man and his music are set. * MUSIC & LETTERS *This book successfully removes his masks of bravado, outrageousness, contradictions and obsessions to reveal a vulnerable, warm humane man, who was proud to call Australia home. * STRINGENDO *It is a breath of fresh air [...] to encounter a book that concentrates exclusively on Grainger's work as a composer, pianist and pioneering thinker. [...] it contributes very usefully to a better understanding of this truly remarkable Australian figure. * MUSIC FORUM *Grainger is not just a composer, or a pianist, or an arranger, he is a phenomenon. And in The New Percy Grainger Companion we are given a vision of that phenomenon in the wealth of his music and in his wide global context. * . *Thwaites and her fellow contributors go far in restoring to general consciousness the full scope of Grainger's work as composer, performer, and ethnomusicologist. The book has something to offer almost every conceivable audience. [...] Recommended. * CHOICE *This is an invaluable book about one of music's least understood practitioners. [...] British-born Australian pianist and composer Penelope Thwaites has done a terrific job piecing together the jigsaw that was Grainger. * THE AUSTRALIAN *[T]his handsome volume is an invaluable - and essential - contribution towards a fuller understanding of a composer on the cusp of overdue rediscovery. * CLASSICAL MUSIC *Recommended without hesitation. * THE DELIAN *This book is full of useful advice. * SYDNEY MORNING HERALD *Generously filled with black and white photographs, reproductions of programmes and musical illustrations, this handsome volume is an invaluable - and essential - contribution towards a fuller understanding of a composer on the cusp of overdue recovery. * INTERNATIONAL PIANO *Thwaites has already contributed substantially to a Grainger revival [...]. Here, as an editor, she manages the trick of finely balancing the various competing aspects of Grainger's energetic and highly productive life [...]. This New Companion succeeds in its aim to portray a complicated man in all his variety [...]. * TLS *
£30.24
Boydell & Brewer Ltd Ernest Newman: A Critical Biography
Book SynopsisExamines the genesis of Ernest Newman's major publications in the context of prevailing intellectual trends in history, criticism and biography. Ernest Newman (1868-1959) left an indelible mark on British musical criticism in a career spanning more than seventy years. His magisterial Life of Richard Wagner, published in four volumes between 1933 and 1946, is regarded as his crowning achievement, but Newman wrote many other influential books and essays on a variety of subjects ranging from early music to Schoenberg. In this book, the geneses of Newman's major publications are examined in thecontext of prevailing intellectual trends in history, criticism and biography. Newman's career as a writer is traced across a wide range of subjects including English and French literature, evolutionary theory and biographical method, and French, German and Russian music. Underpinning many of these works is Newman's preoccupation with rationalism and historical method. By examining particular sets of writings such as composer-biographies and essays from leading newspapers such as the Manchester Guardian and the Sunday Times, this book illustrates the ways in which Newman's work was grounded in late nineteenth-century intellectual paradigms that made him a unique and at times controversial figure. PAUL WATT is Senior Lecturer in Musicology in the Sir Zelman Cowen School of Music at Monash University.Trade ReviewA coherent, engaging, and well-researched study . . . an important book for scholars of music criticism as well as music in Britain. * NOTES, JOURNAL OF THE MUSIC LIBRARY ASSOCIATION *A useful study exploring a fascinating field. * FONTES ARTIS MUSICAE *One comes away from Watt's book with a detailed portrait of Newman the writer and a profound admiration for the way in which the author has painstakingly researched and documented his achievements in the field. * BRIO *Reveals that...Newman's fascinating non-musical background that he brought to music criticism...is the secret of Newman's deeply human renaissance qualities as a writer...[This] critical biography erects the intangible monument that no-one reputedly raises in bronze or marble to critics. * WAGNER NEWS OF VICTORIA *Unpredictably refreshing...Watt has done a very great amount of reading and put these results creditably at our disposal. * GRAMOPHONE *This is indeed a very good and stimulating read. * SOUNDS MAGAZINE *An immensely stimulating and readable book, raising many interesting and ever-relevant questions concerning the nature of music biography and criticism, and how they are affected by extra-musical issue of contemporary social and intellectual preoccupation. * THE MUSICAL TIMES *Thanks to Watt, we know that Newman was personally indebted to his Freethought associates...[this is an] impressively researched book'. -- David Cormack * THE WAGNER JOURNAL *This book is important and will help to keep Newman's contribution to our musical heritage in perspective and alive. * SPIRITED, THE GAZETTE OF THE ENGLISH MUSIC FESTIVAL *The book is extremely well written, referenced, and produced, and shows an exemplary attention to detail...Paul Watt has done scholars a considerable service, this being the first book to place the whole span of Newman's career and the most significant parts of his writing in both context and continuum. -- Paul Rodmell * CONTEXT: JOURNAL OF MUSIC RESEARCH *Newman's thinking...comes into focus remarkably well...This is a readable book, with plenty to tell us about the development of an influential mind. -- Stephen Johnson * BBC MUSIC MAGAZINE *[A] well-researched, well-written, well-presented book, drawing upon an impressive bibliography, both musicological and more broadly historiographical. * NABMSA REVIEWS *Ernest Newman was Wagner's most detailed biographer - and despite the age of his four-volume 'Life Of Richard Wagner' it remains indispensable. Ernest Newman finds himself and his work treated to an equally fine biography by Paul Watt. Well worth your attention. * THE WAGNERIAN *This excellent and detailed biography demands to be consulted in conjunction with Newman's writings. * AUSTRALIAN BOOK REVIEW *Table of ContentsErnest Newman and the Challenge of Critical Biography Formation of a Critical Sensibility: The 1880s and 1890s Social, Literary and Musical Criticism: 1893-1897 A Rationalist Manifesto: Pseudo-Philosophy at the end of the Nineteenth Century, 1897 Music History and the Comparative Method: Gluck and the Opera, 1895 From Manchester to Moscow: Essays on Music, 1900-1920 'The World of Music': Essays in The Sunday Times, 1920-1958 Biographical and Musicological Tensions: The Man Liszt, 1934 Sceptical and Transforming: Books on Wagner, 1899-1959 Conclusion: Ernest Newman Remembered Appendix: Newman's Freethought Lectures, 1894-1896
£58.50
Boydell & Brewer Ltd Music and Soviet Power, 1917-1932
Book SynopsisThe book offers unprecedented access to primary sources that have been unavailable in English, or which lay unknown on archival shelves. Music and Soviet Power offers cultural history told through documents - both colourfuland representative - with an extensive commentary and annotation throughout. The October Revolution of 1917 tore the fabric of Russian musical life: institutions collapsed, and leading composers emigrated or fell into silence. But in 1932, at the outset of the 'socialist realist' period, a new Stalinist music culture was emerging. Between these two dates lies a turbulent period of change which this book charts year by year. It sheds light on the vicious power struggles and ideological wars, the birth of new aesthetic credos, and the gradual increase of Party and state control over music, in the opera houses, the concert halls, the workers' clubs, and on the streets. The book not only provides a detailed and nuanced depiction of the early Soviet musical landscape, but brings it to life by giving voice to the leading actors and commentators of the day. The vibrant public discourse on music is presented through a selection of press articles, reviews and manifestos, all suppliedwith ample commentary. These myriad sources offer a new context for our understanding of Shostakovich, Prokofiev and Myaskovsky, while also showing how Western music was received in the USSR. This, however, is only half the story.The other half emerges from the private dimension of this cultural upheaval, traced through the letters, diaries and memoirs left by composers and other major players in the music world. These materials address the beliefs, motivations and actions of the Russian musical intelligentsia during the painful period of their adjustment to the changing demands of the new state. While following the twists and turns of official policies on music, the authors also offer their own explanations for the outcomes. The book offers unprecedented access to primary sources that have been unavailable in English, or which lay unknown on archival shelves. Music and Soviet Power offers cultural history told through documents - both colourful and representative - with an extensive commentary and annotation throughout. MARINA FROLOVA-WALKER is Professor in Music History at the University of Cambridge anda Fellow of Clare College, Cambridge. JONATHAN WALKER, who has a PhD in Musicology, is a freelance writer, teacher and pianist.Trade Review[A] valuable source for both students and specialists of Soviet history and music. * INT'L JOURNAL OF RUSSIAN STUDIES *Frolova-Walker and Walker have done an admirable job of selecting documents that shed new light on the time period. This is an invaluable source for students of Soviet history and music, and even specialists will find much new material in the range of articles presented here. * REVOLUTIONARY RUSSIA *Highly recommended to those with a specialist or general interest in music [...] or, more broadly, in cultural politics or just politics. * JCES *[A] fascinating and invaluable book [...] It navigates an absorbing way through this difficult and complex period, and presents fresh material that should be made available beyond the confines of academic libraries and their scholars. * MUSICAL TIMES *Few will penetrate the archives as comprehensively as the authors, and the riches they have brought back will help to change and deepen our understanding of early Soviet music. * SCRSS NEWSLETTER *Frolova [sic] and Walker describe these years of relative but tightly circumscribed freedom through the great number of documents they have translated, with excellent introductions and annotations. Some of the authors of these texts are already known, but their work appears here for the first time in a Western language and shows how fiercely the battle was waged on both sides * NRC HANDELSBLAD *[T]o immerse oneself in this collection of manifestos and other cultural polemics is revealing. [...] The apparatus [...] supplies invaluable guideposts. [...] Highly recommended. * CHOICE *Enrich[es] the developing sense of how Soviet artists worked with and against the official dictates of their time, and how they responded to the incidental squabbles and long-term preoccupations with which they had to contend. * TLS *[A] subtly nuanced and painstakingly annotated account of this period unearthing a wealth of documentary information [...] The resulting narrative is extraordinarily vivid, bringing to light much significant material that alters long-established historical preconceptions. * BBC MUSIC MAGAZINE *This is an important book and one that makes compelling reading. With their careful selection and commentary, the authors have brought a level gaze to bear upon dark and difficult times in which optimism and torment seemed to alternate unpredictably. * GRAMOPHONE *
£31.86
Boydell & Brewer Ltd Musical Debate and Political Culture in France,
Book SynopsisThe first full-length treatment of the operatic querelles in eighteenth-century France, placing individual querelles in historical context and tracing common themes of authority, national prestige and the power of music over popular sentiment. In the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, French cultural life seethed with debates about the proper nature and form of musical expression, particularly in opera. Expressed in a flood of pamphlets, articles, letters and poems as well as in the actual disruption of performances, these so-called querelles were seen at the time as a distinctively French phenomenon and have been mined by scholars since for what they can tell us about French politics and culture in the revolutionary period. This is the first full-length treatment of the entire history of this phenomenon, from its beginnings in the last years of Louis XIV to the 1820s when the new musical challenges of Berlioz and Wagner put an end to this particular form of debate. Arnold analyses the individual querelles, showing how they reflected and played their part in wider political and cultural events. At the same time, hetraces themes common in varying degrees to them all - questions of authority, the issue of national prestige, and the relation of language to music. Where some scholars have characterised these disputes as simply politics by proxy, Arnold paints a more nuanced picture, showing that music itself was taken seriously beyond artistic circles because it was seen as having great, potentially limitless, power over popular sentiment and thus implicitly power to reform society and change the world. R.J. Arnold is an honorary research fellow at Birkbeck, University of LondonTrade ReviewArnold demonstrates an extraordinary command of interdisciplinary bibliography - both primary sources and secondary literature - that is helpful to those of us seeking to situate music in the context of political or cultural history. -- Beverly Wilcox * SOCIETY FOR EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY MUSIC NEWSLETTER *Contains more than enough to provoke a new generation of readers into exploring the social dissonances of France. * FONTES ARTIS MUSICAE *[An] admirable and probing study. * THE MUSICAL TIMES *Table of ContentsIntroduction Parallels, Comparisons and Ripostes: The Raguenet-Lecerf Controversy, 1702-32 Spectators, Satirists and Sectarians: The Ramiste-Lulliste Querelle, 1733-51 'A Vast Negotiation': The Querelle des Bouffons, 1752-54 The Spirit of Contradiction: The Gluckiste-Piccinniste Querelle, 1774-88 A Revolutionary Interlude, 1789-1800 The End of the Party: New Avenues for Musical Dispute, 1800-30 Conclusion Bibliography
£71.25
Boydell & Brewer Ltd The Three Choirs Festival: A History: New and
Book SynopsisDescribed in the Radio Times (27 July 2015) as 'A remarkable, unique institution lying at the heart of British life', the Three Choirs Festival celebrated its three-hundred-year anniversary in 2015. Described in the Radio Times (27 July 2015) as 'A remarkable, unique institution lying at the heart of British life', the Three Choirs Festival celebrated its three-hundred-year anniversary in 2015. Rotating each summer between the English cathedral cities of Hereford, Gloucester and Worcester, the Festival is a week-long programme of choral and orchestral concerts, cathedral services, solo and chamber music recitals, master classes, talks, theatre and exhibitions. At the heart of the modern festival are the daily services of Choral Evensong, representing the tradition of Anglican music and liturgy, and the large-scale evening concerts featuring established favourites of the British classical choral tradition with works drawn from a broader, more international musical canvas. Many special commissions and other works, including compositions by British composers such as Jonathan Harvey, James Macmillan, Judith Bingham and John McCabe, and composers from abroad, such as Gerard Schurmann, Jackson Hill and Torsten Rasch, have received their first performances at Three Choirs. Originally published in 1992, this revised edition bringsthe history of the oldest surviving non-competitive music festival in Britain thoroughly up to date. It traces the development of the Festival from its origins in the early eighteenth century to its tercentenary in 2015, along the way touching on many musical milestones - premieres by Parry, Elgar, Vaughan Williams, Saint-Saëns, Holst, and Howells, among others - and luminaries - Sullivan, Stanford, Dvorák, Delius, Bax, and Britten, to name but a few - associated with it. British music enthusiasts especially will find this new edition invaluable. ANTHONY BODEN is a writer with particular interests in music and literature. In 1989 he was appointed as Administrator of theGloucester Three Choirs Festival, a post he held until his retirement in 1999. In 1995 he became the founding Chairman of the Ivor Gurney Society, of which he was elected President in 2015. His other books include Thomas Tomkins: The Last Elizabethan (2004) and The Parrys of the Golden Vale (1998). PAUL HEDLEY is a partner in Exart Performances, an Associate Fellow at the Saïd Business School, University of Oxford, has a PhD in theoretical linguistics, and spent five years as Chief Executive of the Three Choirs Festival.Trade ReviewToday the festival remains one of very few with the major choral repertoire at its heart, and amongst its distinguishing features has been its consistent fostering of contemporary British music, with a natural emphasis on composers with local links, headed by the remarkable cluster of Parry, Elgar, Holst, Vaughan Williams and Howells. * BRIO *One of the many joys of the book is the large number of contemporary reviews covering every aspect of the Festivals...a treasure trove of detail...it must now be the 'really definitive' history of one of the 'Essentially English Institutions'. * THE ORGAN *Beautifully written and lavishly illustrated, this history is laden with compelling insights, many of them as amusing as they are revealing. We are treated to beguiling pen portraits of diverse characters whose creative work is part of our national consciousness...this human aspect above all makes the book hard to put down. * SPIRITED, THE GAZETTE OF THE ENGLISH MUSIC FESTIVAL *What better way to celebrate such a resilient and quintessentially English musical institution than by acquiring this comprehensive historical account of the Three Choirs Festival...this handsome book will appeal particularly to British music enthusiasts. * GRAMOPHONE *This book, makes for fascinating reading and is an invaluable book, for not only musicians, music lovers, festival attendees, but anyone really interested in the musical arts of Britain. -- Peter Byrom-Smith * THE BRITISH MUSIC SOCIETY *[A] scrupulously detailed history of The Three Choirs Festival...Priceless! * BBC MUSIC MAGAZINE *Brings us truly up to date with the ups and downs of an institution already more than three centuries old -- and fortunately there are more ups. * BIRMINGHAM POST *Highly readable...The product of evidently thorough research. An absorbing and invaluable record of one of Europe's most distinguished music festivals. * MUSICWEB *Table of ContentsOrigins A Fortuitous and Friendly Proposal A Numerous Appearance of Gentry 'The Musick of my Admiration Handel' The Gentlemen and the Players Avoiding Shipwreck Prima Voce Favourites and Flops Sacred and Profane Froissart The Unreasonable Man The Dream Beyond These Voices An Essentially English Institution The Elgar Festivals Dona Nobis Pacem Recovery Association A New Epoch Jubilee Theme with Variations Houses of the Mind A Gold-Plated Orchestra A New Millenium Reorganisation An Invitation to the Palace Appendix: Three Choirs Festival Timeline
£36.00
Boydell & Brewer Ltd Music Criticism in France, 1918-1939: Authority,
Book SynopsisThis collection uncovers how music criticism contributed to national and transnational preoccupations and agendas. Music Criticism in France examines the aesthetic battles that animated and informed French musical criticism during the interwar period (1918-1939). Drawing upon a rich corpus of critical writings and archival documents, the book uncovers some of the public debates surrounding classical music in the immediate aftermath of the Great War until the eve of World War II. As such, it provides new insights into the priorities, values and challenges that affected the musical milieu of this war-bound generation. This collection of essays brings together scholars from different areas of musicology and related humanities disciplines; it also draws on different anglophone and francophone intellectual traditions. As well as considering the reception of individual works, the contributors examine key individuals, composer-critic pairings, the composer as critic and technician, the role of influential journals, and music criticism as a pedagogical tool for concert-going and radio audiences. Focusing on the themes of authority, advocacy and legacy, it shows the contribution of principal critics such as Vuillermoz, Vallas, Prunières, Schloezer and Koechlin to shaping our understanding of music in the first half of the twentieth century in France. We see how criticism contributes to national and transnational preoccupations and agendas, which were of considerable importance throughout the interwar period and continue to have relevance today. BARBARA L. KELLY is Director of Research and Professor of Musicology at the Royal Northern College of Music, Manchester. CHRISTOPHER MOORE is Associate Professor of Musicology at the University of Ottawa. Contributors: PHILIPPE CATHÉ, MICHEL DUCHESNEAU, KIMBERLY FRANCIS, JACINTHE HARBEC, BARBARA L. KELLY, PASCAL LÉCROART, CHRISTOPHER MOORE, RACHEL MOORE, JANN PASLER, CAROLINE RAE, DANICK TROTTIER, MARIANNE WHEELDONTrade Review[T]he first detailed study of its kind . . . . Ultimately, what emerges from [this book] is not only a thought-provoking and highly variegated impression of the roles and activities of French music criticism in the 1920s and 30s but also a clear sense of the importance of the study of the discourse of music criticism within musicology that is also part of a broader context of sociopolitical and cultural history. -- Alexander Carpenter * NOTES, THE QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF THE MUSIC LIBRARY ASSOCIATION *Useful to anyone seeking an overview of the facts relating to music criticism in the interwar period. * REVUE DE MUSICOLOGIE *Table of ContentsIntroduction: The Role of Criticism in Interwar Musical Culture - Christopher Moore and Barbara L. Kelly Music Criticism and Aesthetics during the Interwar Period: Fewer Crimes and More Punishments - Michel Duchesneau Nostalgia and Violence in the Music Criticism of L'Action française - Christopher Moore Charles Koechlin: The Figure of the Expert - Philippe Cathé Bleu-horizon Politics and Music for Radio Listeners: L'Initiation à la musique (1935) - Jann Pasler Common Canon, Conflicting Ideologies: Music Criticism in Performance in Interwar France - Barbara L. Kelly Arthur Honegger: Music Critic for Musique et Théâtre (1925-1926) - Pascal Lécroart A Woman's Critical Voice: Nadia Boulanger and Le Monde musical, 1919-1923 - Kimberly Francis From a Foreign Correspondent: the Parisian Chronicles of Alejo Carpentier - Caroline Rae Debussy's 'Reputational Entrepreneurs': Vuillermoz, Koechlin, Laloy, and Vallas - Marianne Wheeldon The Legacy of War: Conceptualising Wartime Musical Life in the Post-War Musical Press, 1919-1920 - Rachel Moore Jacinthe Harbec, Satie, Relâche and the Press: Controversies and Legacy - Jacinthe Harbec Creating a Canon: Émile Vuillermoz's Musiques d'aujourd'hui and French Musical Modernity - Danick Trottier Bibliography
£85.00
Boydell & Brewer Ltd British Musical Criticism and Intellectual
Book SynopsisThis collection provides an in-depth look at musical criticism between the mid-nineteenth and the mid-twentieth century. British music between the mid-nineteenth and the mid-twentieth century reflected changes and developments in society, education, philosophy, aesthetics, politics and the upheaval of wars, often signifying a distinctively British national history. All of these changes informed the published work of contemporary music critics. This collection provides an in-depth look at musical criticism during this period. It focusses on major figures such as Grove,Parry, Shaw, Dent, Newman, Heseltine, Vaughan Williams, Dyson, Lambert and Keller, yet does not neglect less influential but nevertheless significant critics. Sometimes a seminal work forms the subject of investigation; in otherchapters, a writer's particular stance is highlighted. Further contributions closely analyse the now famous polemics by Shaw, Heseltine and Lambert. The book covers a range of themes from the historical, scientific and philosophical to matters of repertoire, taste, interdisciplinary influence, musical democratisation and analysis. It will be of interest to scholars and students of nineteenth- and early twentieth-century British music and music in Britain as well as to music enthusiasts attracted to standard works of popular music criticism. JEREMY DIBBLE is Professor of Music at Durham University. JULIAN HORTON is Professor of Music at Durham University. Contributors: KAREN ARRANDALE, SEAMAS DE BARRA, PHILIP ROSS BULLOCK, JONATHAN CLINCH, SARAH COLLINS, JEREMY DIBBLE, JULIAN HORTON, PETER HORTON, CHRISTOPHER MARK, AIDAN J. THOMSON, PAUL WATT, HARRY WHITE, BENNETT ZON, PATRICKZUKTrade Review[A] welcome addition to the growing literature on the writers who sought in one way or another to shape public opinion during an extraordinary period in the evolution of the role of music in British life, marked by radical transformations in musical culture both at home and abroad. . . . [A] major and timely contribution to the field of British music studies. -- Alain Frogley * NABMSA REVIEWS *A well thought-out publication and a substantial contribution to an as yet under-represented area of British music studies. * BRIO *Will be primarily of interest to scholars who wish to gain a quick overview of a particular figure's work. * THE JOURNAL OF MUSIC *Table of ContentsIntroduction: Trends in British Musical Thought, 1850-1950 - Jeremy Dibble and Julian Horton Avoiding 'Coarse Invective' and 'Unseemly Vehemence': English Music Criticism, 1850-1870 - Peter Horton Spencer, Sympathy and the Oxford School of Music Criticism - Bennett Zon Free Thought and the Musician: Ernest Walker, the 'English Hanslick' - Jeremy Dibble Ernest Newman and the Promise of Method in Biography, Criticism and History - Paul Watt 'Making Symphony Articulate': Bernard Shaw's Sense of Music History - Harry White Analysis and Value Judgment: Schumann, Bruckner and Tovey's Essays in Musical Analysis - Julian Horton The Scholar as Critic: Edward J. Dent - Karen Arrandale Russia and Eastern Europe - Philip Ross Bullock Anti-Intellectualism and the Rhetoric of 'National Character' in Music: The Vulgarity of Over-Refinement - Sarah Collins Chosen Causes: Writings on Music by Bernard van Dieren, Peter Warlock and Cecil Gray - Séamas de Barra 'Es klang so alt und war doch so neu': Vaughan Williams, Aesthetics and History - Aidan J. Thomson Constant Lambert: A Critic for Today? A Commentary on Music Ho! - Christopher Mark The Challenge to Goodwill: Herbert Howells, Alban Berg and 'The Modern Problem' - Jonathan Clinch Hans Keller: The Making of an 'Anti-Critic' - Select Bibliography
£85.00
Boydell & Brewer Ltd The Creative Worlds of Joseph Joachim
Book SynopsisExamines Joseph Joachim's vital legacy through a range of philological, philosophical and critical approaches. Joseph Joachim (1831-1907), violinist, composer, teacher, and founding director of Berlin's Royal Academy of Music, was one of the most eminent and influential musicians of the long nineteenth century. Born in a tiny Jewish community on the Austro-Hungarian border, he rose to a position of unsurpassed prominence in European cultural life. This timely collection of essays explores important yet little-known aspects of Joachim's life and art. Studies of his Jewish background, early assimilation into Christian society, Felix Mendelssohn's mentorship, and the influence of Hungarian vernacular music on the formation of his musical style elucidate the roots of Joachim's identity. The later chapters focus on his personal and creative responses to the contentious and rapidly evolving cultural milieu in which he lived: his choice of instruments as his musical "voice," his performances as sites of (re)enchantment in the modern age, his pathbreaking British career, his calling and sway as a quartet player, his pedagogical legacy, his influence on the establishment of the musical canon, and several of his most distinctive and original compositions. With a wide variety of approaches-analytical, philological, archival, philosophical, and critical-this collection will prove enlightening to scholars, performers, and others interested in this brilliant artist and the musical aesthetics, culture, and styles of his time.Trade ReviewA responsible, far-reaching, provocative series of essays. Essential. * CHOICE MAGAZINE *Table of ContentsIntroduction: The Creative Worlds of Joseph Joachim Robert Whitehouse Eshbach PART ONE: Identity 1. "Of the Highest Good": Joachim's Relationship to Mendelssohn R. Larry Todd 2. Joseph Joachim and His Jewish Dilemma Styra Avins 3. Joachim and Romani Musicians: Their Relationship and Common Features in Performance Practice Mineo Ota PART TWO: Joachim as Performer4. Joachim's Violins: Spotlights on Some of Them Ruprecht Kamlah 5. (Re-)Enchanting Performance: Joachim and the Spirit of Beethoven Karen Leistra-Jones 6. "Thou That Hast Been in England Many a Year": The British Joachim Ian Maxwell 7. Joachim at the Crystal Palace Michael Musgrave 8. "Music Was Poured by Perfect Ministrants": Joseph Joachim at the Monday Popular Concerts, London Therese Ellsworth 9. "Das Quartett-Spiel ist doch wohl mein eigentliches Fach": Joseph Joachim and the String Quartet Robert Riggs 10. Professor Joachim and His Pupils Sanna Pederson 11. Performers as Authors of Music History: Joseph and Amalie Joachim Beatrix Borchard 12. At the Intersection of Performance and Composition: Joseph Joachim and Brahms's Piano Quartet in A Major, Op. 26, Movement III William P. Horne PART THREE: Joachim as Composer 13. Re-considering the Young Composer-Performer Joseph Joachim, 1841-53 Katharina Uhde 14. "Franz Liszt gewidmet": Joseph Joachim's G-minor Violin Concerto, Op. 3 Vasiliki Papadopoulou 15. Drama and Music in Joachim's Overture to Shakespeare's Henry IV Valerie Woodring Goertzen 16. "So Gleams the Past, the Light of Other Days": Joachim's Hebräische Melodien for Viola and Piano, Op. 9 (1853) Marie Sumner Lott 17. Tovey's View of Joachim's "Hungarian" Violin Concerto Robert Riggs Bibliography Index
£85.00