The New Music Connoisseur

The New Music Connoisseur
Title The New Music Connoisseur PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Total Pages 74
Release 2007
Genre Music
ISBN

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Marc Blitzstein

Marc Blitzstein
Title Marc Blitzstein PDF eBook
Author Howard Pollack
Publisher Oxford University Press
Total Pages 688
Release 2012-09-05
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 0199791678

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A composer and lyricist of enormous innovation and influence, Marc Blitzstein remains one of the most versatile and fascinating figures in the history of American music, his creative output running the gamut from films scores and Broadway operas to art songs and chamber pieces. A prominent leftist and social maverick, Blitzstein constantly pushed the boundaries of convention in mid-century America in both his work and his life. Award-winning music historian Howard Pollack's new biography covers Blitzstein's life in full, from his childhood in Philadelphia to his violent death in Martinique at age 58. The author describes how this student of contemporary luminaries Nadia Boulanger and Arnold Schoenberg became swept up in the stormy political atmosphere of the 1920s and 1930s and throughout his career walked the fine line between his formal training and his populist principles. Indeed, Blitzstein developed a unique sound that drew on everything contemporary, from the high modernism of Stravinsky and Hindemith to jazz and Broadway show tunes. Pollack captures the astonishing breadth of Blitzstein's work--from provocative operas like The Cradle Will Rock, No for an Answer, and Regina, to the wartime Airborne Symphony composed during his years in service, to lesser known ballets, film scores, and stage works. A courageous artist, Blitzstein translated Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill's The Threepenny Opera during the heyday of McCarthyism and the red scare, and turned it into an off-Broadway sensation, its "Mack the Knife" becoming one of the era's biggest hits. Beautifully written, drawing on new interviews with friends and family of the composer, and making extensive use of new archival and secondary sources, Marc Blitzstein presents the most complete biography of this important American artist.

Women of Influence in Contemporary Music

Women of Influence in Contemporary Music
Title Women of Influence in Contemporary Music PDF eBook
Author Michael K. Slayton
Publisher Scarecrow Press
Total Pages 496
Release 2010-12-23
Genre Music
ISBN 0810877481

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In this collection of essays and interviews, nine gifted composers openly discuss their work.

The Oxford Handbook of the New Cultural History of Music

The Oxford Handbook of the New Cultural History of Music
Title The Oxford Handbook of the New Cultural History of Music PDF eBook
Author Jane F. Fulcher
Publisher Oxford University Press
Total Pages 605
Release 2013-12
Genre History
ISBN 019935409X

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This volume demonstrates a new approach to cultural history, as it now being practiced by both historians and musicologists, and the field's quest to grasp the realms of human experience, understanding, communication and meaning through the study of music and of musical practices. The contributors employ a resonant new methodological synthesis which combines the theoretical perspectives drawn from the "new cultural history" and "new musicology" of the 1980s with recent social, sociological, and anthropological theories.

Music and the Skillful Listener

Music and the Skillful Listener
Title Music and the Skillful Listener PDF eBook
Author Denise Von Glahn
Publisher Indiana University Press
Total Pages 417
Release 2013-04-09
Genre Music
ISBN 0253006627

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Explores the relationship between listening and musical composition focusing on nine American women composers inspired by the sounds of the natural world

Hans Christian Andersen and Music

Hans Christian Andersen and Music
Title Hans Christian Andersen and Music PDF eBook
Author AnnaHarwell Celenza
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 282
Release 2017-07-05
Genre Music
ISBN 1351564226

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Hans Christian Andersen was the most prominent Danish author of the nineteenth century. Now known primarily for his fairy tales, during his lifetime he was equally famous for his novels, travelogues, poetry, and stage works, and it was through these genres that he most often reflected on the world around him. With the bicentennial of Andersen's birth in 2005, there is still much about the writer that is not yet common knowledge. This book explores a single aspect of that void - his interest in and relationship to the musical culture of nineteenth-century Europe. Why look to Andersen for information about music? To begin, Andersen had a musical background. He enjoyed a brief career as an opera singer and dancer at the Royal Theater in Copenhagen, and in later years he went on to produce opera libretti for the Danish and German stage. Andersen was also an avid music devotee. He made thirty major European tours during his seventy years, and on each of these trips he regularly attended opera and concert performances, recording his impressions in a series of travel diaries. In short, Andersen was a well-informed listener, and as this book reveals, his reflections on the music of his age serve as valuable sources for the study of music reception in the nineteenth century. Over the course of his life, Andersen embraced and then later rejected performers such as Maria Malibran, Franz Liszt, and Ole Bull, and his interest in opera and instrumental music underwent a series of dramatic transformations. In his final years, Andersen promoted figures as disparate as Wagner and Mendelssohn, while strongly objecting to Brahms. Although such changes in taste might be interpreted as indiscriminate by modern-day readers, this study shows that such shifts in opinion were not contradictory, but rather quite logical given the social and cultural climate of the age.

Commemorating Gallipoli through Music

Commemorating Gallipoli through Music
Title Commemorating Gallipoli through Music PDF eBook
Author John Morgan O'Connell
Publisher Lexington Books
Total Pages 322
Release 2017-12-01
Genre Music
ISBN 1498556213

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This book examines the role of music and musicians in commemorating the Gallipoli Campaign (1915-6). It shows how music-making can be used to uncover the multiple identities and complex positionalities of former combatants who wish to memorialize a military catastrophe that coincided with the foundation of nation states.