Untwisting the Serpent
Title | Untwisting the Serpent PDF eBook |
Author | Daniel Albright |
Publisher | University of Chicago Press |
Total Pages | 424 |
Release | 2000 |
Genre | Art |
ISBN | 9780226012544 |
Modernist art often seems to give more frustration than pleasure to its audience. Daniel Albright shows that this perception arises partly because we usually consider each art form in isolation, rather than collaboration.
Modernism and Music
Title | Modernism and Music PDF eBook |
Author | Daniel Albright |
Publisher | University of Chicago Press |
Total Pages | 446 |
Release | 2004-02-03 |
Genre | Music |
ISBN | 9780226012667 |
If in earlier eras music may have seemed slow to respond to advances in other artistic media, during the modernist age it asserted itself in the vanguard. Modernism and Music provides a rich selection of texts on this moment, some translated into English for the first time. It offers not only important statements by composers and critics, but also musical speculations by poets, novelists, philosophers, and others-all of which combine with Daniel Albright's extensive, interlinked commentary to place modernist music in the full context of intellectual and cultural history.
Essays on the Anatomy and Philosophy of Expression
Title | Essays on the Anatomy and Philosophy of Expression PDF eBook |
Author | Sir Charles Bell |
Publisher | |
Total Pages | 266 |
Release | 1824 |
Genre | Anatomy, Artistic |
ISBN |
Oxford History of Western Music
Title | Oxford History of Western Music PDF eBook |
Author | Richard Taruskin |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Total Pages | 3856 |
Release | 2009-07-27 |
Genre | Music |
ISBN | 0199813698 |
The Oxford History of Western Music is a magisterial survey of the traditions of Western music by one of the most prominent and provocative musicologists of our time. This text illuminates, through a representative sampling of masterworks, those themes, styles, and currents that give shape and direction to each musical age. Taking a critical perspective, this text sets the details of music, the chronological sweep of figures, works, and musical ideas, within the larger context of world affairs and cultural history. Written by an authoritative, opinionated, and controversial figure in musicology, The Oxford History of Western Music provides a critical aesthetic position with respect to individual works, a context in which each composition may be evaluated and remembered. Taruskin combines an emphasis on structure and form with a discussion of relevant theoretical concepts in each age, to illustrate how the music itself works, and how contemporaries heard and understood it. It also describes how the c
Beckett and Aesthetics
Title | Beckett and Aesthetics PDF eBook |
Author | Daniel Albright |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Total Pages | 200 |
Release | 2003-12-22 |
Genre | Art |
ISBN | 9780521829083 |
Beckett and Aesthetics, first published in 2003, examines Samuel Beckett's struggle with the recalcitrance of artistic media, their refusal to yield to his artistic purposes. As a young man Beckett hoped that writing could provide psychic authenticity and true representation of the physical world; instead he found himself immersed in artificialities and self-enclosed word games. Daniel Albright argues that Beckett escaped from this bind through allegories of artistic frustration and through an art of non-representation, estrangement and general failure. He arrived, Albright shows, at some grasp of fact through the most indirect route available. Albright explores Beckett's experimentation with the notion that an artistic medium might itself be made to speak. This powerful and highly original book explores Beckett's own engagement with radio, film, and television, prose and drama as part of an attempt to escape the confines of the aesthetic. Albright's Beckett becomes a sophisticated theorist of the very notion of the aesthetic.
Weill's Musical Theater
Title | Weill's Musical Theater PDF eBook |
Author | Stephen Hinton |
Publisher | Univ of California Press |
Total Pages | 586 |
Release | 2012-04-10 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 0520271777 |
“This book, the first scholarly consideration of Weill’s complete output of stage works, is without doubt the most important critical study of the composer’s oeuvre to date in any language. Hinton’s scholarship is superior and his insights original and illuminating. The product of several decades of engagement with Weill’s works, their sources and reception, as well as the secondary literature, the book is a stunning achievement. Brilliantly conceived and executed, it will take its place as one of the cornerstones of Weill studies.”—Kim H. Kowalke, University of Rochester and President, Kurt Weill Foundation for Music “In Weill’s Musical Theater: Stages of Reform, Stephen Hinton reminds us that Kurt Weill was always a revolutionary. The composer’s insistent dedication to a provocative, constantly evolving lyric theater that spoke directly to audiences meant that Weill remained as controversial as he was popular. The celebrity that endeared him to Broadway made him anathema in Berlin. Some sixty years after Weill’s death, Hinton is finally able to demonstrate the consistent brilliance, theatrical power, and coherence of a composer who revolutionized every genre he touched (or used) and whose collaborators read as a who’s who of twentieth-century theater.” —David Savran, author of Highbrow/Lowdown: Theater, Jazz, and the Making of the New Middle Class "Stephen Hinton presents us with an image of Weill that is at once monumental yet still alive. A truly Protean figure, Weill is not an easy man to grasp in his totality; Brecht once wrote that a man thrown into water will have to develop webbed feet, and as a refugee from Nazi Germany, Weill had to become a cultural amphibian. But in Weill's Musical Theater we see the composer from every angle: through the gaze of countless critics and reviewers, through Weill's own eyes, and finally through the filter of Hinton's judicious, focused prose. This account will stand."—Daniel Albright, author of Untwisting the Serpent: Modernism in Music, Literature, and Other Arts
Sounding the Gallery
Title | Sounding the Gallery PDF eBook |
Author | Holly Rogers |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Total Pages | 246 |
Release | 2013-05-23 |
Genre | Music |
ISBN | 0199861420 |
Sounding the Gallery argues that early video art is an audiovisual genre. The new video technology not only enabled artists to sound their visual work and composers to visualise their music during the 1960s: it also initiated a spatial form of engagement that encouraged new relationships between art / music practices and their audiences.