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Books > Music > Composers & musicians
Arnold Schoenberg was a polarizing figure in twentieth century
music, and his works and ideas have had considerable and lasting
impact on Western musical life. A refugee from Nazi Europe, he
spent an important part of his creative life in the United States
(1933-1951), where he produced a rich variety of works and
distinguished himself as an influential teacher. However, while his
European career has received much scholarly attention, surprisingly
little has been written about the genesis and context of his works
composed in America, his interactions with Americans and other
emigres, and the substantial, complex, and fascinating performance
and reception history of his music in this country.
Author Sabine Feisst illuminates Schoenberg's legacy and sheds a
corrective light on a variety of myths about his sojourn. Looking
at the first American performances of his works and the
dissemination of his ideas among American composers in the 1910s,
1920s and early 1930s, she convincingly debunks the myths
surrounding Schoenberg's alleged isolation in the US. Whereas most
previous accounts of his time in the US have portrayed him as
unwilling to adapt to American culture, this book presents a more
nuanced picture, revealing a Schoenberg who came to terms with his
various national identities in his life and work. Feisst dispels
lingering negative impressions about Schoenberg's teaching style by
focusing on his methods themselves as well as on his powerful
influence on such well-known students as John Cage, Lou Harrison,
and Dika Newlin. Schoenberg's influence is not limited to those who
followed immediately in his footsteps-a wide range of composers,
from Stravinsky adherents to experimentalists to jazz and film
composers, were equally indebted to Schoenberg, as were key figures
in music theory like Milton Babbitt and David Lewin. In sum,
Schoenberg's New World contributes to a new understanding of one of
the most important pioneers of musical modernism."
As a result of their actions such as the "Punk Prayer" in Moscow's
Christ the Savior Cathedral and their subsequent trials, the girls
of Pussy Riot were transformed into icons of protest. The images of
the principal members, Nadezda Tolokonnikova and Maria Alekhina,
were seen all around the world before the two disappeared for two
years into Russian prison camps. Immediately after their release,
the successful Dutch entrepreneur and avid photographer Bert
Verwelius contacted the two women, setting into motion what was to
be an extraordinary photo shoot: using the activists' stories and
sketches of the prison camp, he depicted their living and working
conditions there as an impressive picture series. Yet Bert
Verwelius also shows us a very different, hidden side to the two
young women in this book, his first publication. With his sensitive
portraits, he captures the open and loveable nature of Nadezda
Tolokonnikova and Maria Alekhina-- not to mention their beauty.
You have never seen the women behind the masks quite like this
Although Mendelssohn was most famous during his lifetime as a
composer, virtuoso pianist, and conductor, he also enjoyed an
enviable reputation as a highly skilled organist. The instrument
had fascinated - one might almost say mesmerized - him from
earliest youth, but aside from a year or so of formal training at
the age of about twelve or thirteen, he was entirely self-taught.
He never held a position as church organist, and he never had any
organ pupils. Nevertheless, the instrument played a uniquely
important role in his personal life. In the course of his many
travels, whether in major cities or tiny villages, he invariably
gravitated to the organ loft, where he might spend hours playing
the works of Bach or simply improvising. Although the piano clearly
served Mendelssohn as an eminently practical instrument, the organ
seems to have been his instrument of choice. He searched out an
organ loft, not because he had to, but because he wanted to,
because on the organ he could find catharsis. Indeed, as he once
exclaimed to his parents, after reading a portion of Schiller's
Wilhelm Tell, "I must rush off to the monastery and work off my
excitement on the organ "
Mendelssohn's public performance on the organ in Germany was rare,
and he gave but one public recital - in the Thomas-Kirche in
Leipzig in 1840. In England, however, he evidently felt more
comfortable on the organ bench and played there often before large
crowds. Indeed, he performed as Guest Organist twice at the
Birmingham Music Festivals, in 1837 and 1842.
Given Mendelssohn's profound affinity for the organ, it is
remarkable that he composed but relatively little for the
instrument, and assigned an Opus number to only two works - his
Three Preludes and Fugues for Organ (Op. 37) and his Six Sonatas
for the Organ (Op. 65). A small number of organ works, plus
sketches and drafts, were scattered among his musical papers; most
of these only gradually found their way into print, and it was not
until the late twentieth century that an edition of his complete
organ works was finally published. This volume is intended as a
companion to that edition.
On January 16, 1938 Benny Goodman brought his swing orchestra to
America's venerated home of European classical music, Carnegie
Hall. The resulting concert - widely considered one of the most
significant events in American music history - helped to usher jazz
and swing music into the American cultural mainstream. This
reputation has been perpetuated by Columbia Records' 1950 release
of the concert on LP. Now, in Benny Goodman's Famous 1938 Carnegie
Hall Jazz Concert, jazz scholar and musician Catherine Tackley
provides the first in depth, scholarly study of this seminal
concert and recording. Combining rigorous documentary and archival
research with close analysis of the recording, Tackley strips back
the accumulated layers of interpretation and meaning to assess the
performance in its original context, and explore what the material
has come to represent in its recorded form. Taking a complete view
of the concert, she examines the rich cultural setting in which it
took place, and analyzes the compositions, arrangements and
performances themselves, before discussing the immediate reception,
and lasting legacy and impact of this storied event and album. As
the definitive study of one of the most important recordings of the
twentieth-century, Benny Goodman's Famous 1938 Carnegie Hall Jazz
Concert is a must-read for all serious jazz fans, musicians and
scholars.
Today, Claude Debussy's position as a central figure in
twentieth-century concert music is secure, and scholarship has long
taken for granted the enduring musical and aesthetic contributions
of his compositions. Yet this was not always the case. Unknown to
many concert-goers and music scholars is the fact that for years
after his death, Debussy's musical aesthetic was perceived as
outmoded, decadent, and even harmful for French music. In Debussy's
Legacy and the Construction of Reputation, Marianne Wheeldon
examines the vicissitudes of the composer's posthumous reception in
the 1920s and 30s, and analyzes the confluence of factors that
helped to overturn the initial backlash against his music. Rather
than viewing Debussy's artistic greatness as the cause of his
enduring legacy, she considers it instead as an effect, tracing the
manifold processes that shaped how his music was received and how
its aesthetic worth was consolidated. Speaking to readers both
within and beyond the domain of French music and culture, Debussy's
Legacy and the Construction of Reputation enters into dialogue with
research in the sociology of reputation and commemoration,
examining the collective nature of the processes of artistic
consecration. By analyzing the cultural forces that came to bear on
the formation of Debussy's legacy, Wheeldon contributes to a
greater understanding of the inter-war period-the cultural
politics, debates, and issues that confronted musicians in 1920s
and 30s Paris-and offers a musicological perspective on the subject
of reputation building, to date underrepresented in recent writings
on reputation and commemoration in the humanities. Debussy's Legacy
and the Construction of Reputation is an important new study,
groundbreaking in its methodology and in its approach to musical
influence and cultural consecration.
More than any rock artist since The Beatles, Radiohead's music
inhabits the sweet spot between two extremes: on the one hand,
music that is wholly conventional and conforms to all expectations
of established rock styles, and, on the other hand, music so
radically experimental that it thwarts any learned notions. While
averting mainstream trends but still achieving a significant level
of success in both US and UK charts, Radiohead's music includes
many surprises and subverted expectations, yet remains accessible
within a framework of music traditions. In Everything in its Right
Place: Analyzing Radiohead, Brad Osborn reveals the functioning of
this reconciliation of extremes in various aspects of Radiohead's
music, analyzing the unexpected shifts in song structure, the
deformation of standard 4/4 backbeats, the digital manipulation of
familiar rock 'n' roll instrumentation, and the expected
resolutions of traditional cadence structures. Expanding on recent
work in musical perception, focusing particularly on form, rhythm
and meter, timbre, and harmony, Everything in its Right Place
treats Radiohead's recordings as rich sonic ecosystems in which a
listener participates in an individual search for meaning, bringing
along expectations learned from popular music, classical music, or
even Radiohead's own compositional idiolect. Radiohead's violations
of these subjective expectation-realization chains prompt the
listener to search more deeply for meaning within corresponding
lyrics, biographical details of the band, or intertextual
relationships with music, literature, or film. Synthesizing
insights from a range of new methodologies in the theory of pop and
rock, and specifically designed for integration into music theory
courses for upper level undergraduates, Everything in its Right
Place is sure to find wide readership among scholars and students,
as well as avid listeners who seek a deeper understanding of
Radiohead's distinctive juxtapositional style.
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Hidden History of Music Row
(Paperback)
Brian. Allison, Elizabeth Elkins, Vanessa Olivarez; Foreword by Kix Brooks of Brooks & Dunn
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Discovery Miles 5 310
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Keith Jarrett ranks among the most accomplished and influential
pianists in jazz history. His TheKoln Concert stands among the most
important jazz recordings of the past four decades, not only
because of the music on the record, but also because of the
remarkable reception it has received from musicians and
lay-listeners alike. Since the album's 1975 release, it has sold
over three million copies: a remarkable achievement for any jazz
record, but an unprecedented feat for a two-disc set of solo piano
performances featuring no well-known songs.
In Keith Jarrett's The Koln Concert, author Peter Elsdon seeks to
uncover what it is about this recording, about Keith Jarrett's
performance, that elicits such success. Recognizing The Koln
Concert as a multi-faceted text, Elsdon engages with it musically,
culturally, aesthetically, and historically in order to understand
the concert and album as a means through which Jarrett articulated
his own cultural and musical outlook, and establish himself as a
serious artist. Through these explorations of the concert as text,
of the recording and of the live performance, Keith Jarrett's The
Koln Concert fills a major hole in jazz scholarship, and is
essential reading for jazz scholars and musicians alike, as well as
Keith Jarrett's many fans."
Gioachino Rossini was one of the most influential, as well as one
of the most industrious and emotionally complex of the great
nineteenth-century composers. Between 1810 and 1829, he wrote 39
operas, a body of work, comic and serious, which transformed
Italian opera and radically altered the course of opera in France.
His retirement from operatic composition in 1829, at the age of 37,
was widely assumed to be the act of a talented but lazy man. In
reality, political events and a series of debilitating illnesses
were the determining factors. After drafting the Stabat Mater in
1832, Rossini wrote no music of consequence for the best part of
twenty-five years, before the clouds lifted and he began composing
again in Paris in the late 1850s. During this glorious Indian
summer of his career, he wrote 150 songs and solo piano pieces his
'Sins of Old Age' and his final masterpiece, the Petite Messe
solennelle. The image of Rossini as a gifted but feckless
amateur-the witty, high-spirited bon vivant who dashed off The
Barber of Seville in a mere thirteen days-persisted down the years,
until the centenary of his death in 1968 inaugurated a process of
re-evaluation by scholars, performers, and writers. The original
1985 edition of Richard Osborne's pioneering and widely acclaimed
Rossini redefined the life and provided detailed analyses of the
complete Rossini oeuvre. Twenty years on, all Rossini's operas have
been staged and recorded, a Critical Edition of his works is well
advanced, and a scholarly edition of his correspondence, including
250 previously unknown letters from Rossini to his parents, is in
progress. Drawing on these past two decades of scholarship and
performance, this new edition of Rossini provides the most detailed
portrait we have yet had of one of the worlds best-loved and most
enigmatic composers.
The thirty-two Piano Sonatas of Ludwig van Beethoven form one of
the most important segments of piano literature. In this
accessible, compact, and comprehensive guidebook, renowned
performer and pedagogue Stewart Gordon presents the pianist with
historical insights and practical instructional tools for
interpreting the pieces. In the opening chapters of Beethoven's 32
Piano Sonatas, Gordon illuminates the essential historical context
behind common performance problems, discussing Beethoven's own
pianos and how they relate to compositional style and demands in
the pieces, and addressing textual issues, performance practices,
and nuances of the composer's manuscript inscriptions. In outlining
patterns of structure, sonority, keyboard technique, and emotional
meaning evident across Beethoven's compositional development,
Gordon provides important background and technical information key
to understanding his works in context. Part II of the book presents
each sonata in an outline-chart format, giving the student and
teacher ready access to essential information, interpretive
choices, and technical challenges in the individual works, measure
by measure, all in one handy reference source. In consideration of
the broad diversity of today's Beethoven interpreters, Gordon
avoids one-size-fits-all solutions or giving undue weight to his
own tastes and preferences. Instead, he puts the choices in the
hands of the performers, enabling them to create their own personal
relationship with the music and a more powerful performance.
Heinrich Schutz (1585-1672) was the most important and influential
German composer of the seventeenth century. Director of music at
the electoral Saxon court in Dresden, he was lauded by his German
contemporaries as "the father of our modern music," as "the Orpheus
of our time." Yet despite the esteem in which his music is still
held today, Schutz himself and the rich cultural environment in
which he lived continue to be little known or understood beyond the
linguistic borders of his native Germany.
Drawing on original manuscript and print sources, A Heinrich Schutz
Reader brings the composer to life through more than 150 documents
by or about Heinrich Schutz, from his earliest studies under
Giovanni Gabrieli to accounts of his final hours. Editor and
translator Gregory S. Johnston penetrates the archaic script,
confronts the haphazard orthography and obsolete vocabulary, and
untangles the knotted grammatical constructions and syntax to
produce translations that allow English speakers, as never before,
to engage the composer directly.
Most of the German, Latin and Italian documents included in this
volume appear for the first time in English translation. A number
of these texts have not even been printed in their original
language. Dedications and prefaces of his printed music, letters
and memoranda, poetry and petitions, travel passes and contracts,
all offer immediate and unabridged access to the composer's life.
To habituate the reader ever more in Schutz's world, the entries
are richly annotated with biographical detail; clarifications of
professional relationships and ancestral lines; information on
geographic regions, domains, cities, courts and institutions; and
references to biblical, classical and contemporary literary
sources.
Johnston opens a door for researchers and scholars across a broad
range of disciplines, and at the same time provides an historical
complement and literary companion for anyone who has come to
appreciate the beauty of Schutz's music."
Black Sabbath is currently on The End Tour," which they have
proclaimed as their final concert tour . Iron Man chronicles the
story of both pioneering guitarist Tony Iommi and legendary band
Black Sabbath, dubbed The Beatles of heavy metal" by Rolling Stone
. Iron Man reveals the man behind the icon yet still captures
Iommi's humour, intelligence, and warmth. He speaks honestly and
unflinchingly about his rough-and-tumble childhood, the accident
that almost ended his career, his failed marriages, personal
tragedies, battles with addiction, band mates, famous friends,
newfound daughter, and the ups and downs of his life as an artist.
Everything associated with hard rock happened to Black Sabbath
first: the drugs, the debauchery, the drinking, the dungeons, the
pressure, the pain, the conquests, the company men, the contracts,
the combustible drummer, the critics, the comebacks, the singers,
the Stonehenge set, the music, the money, the madness, the metal.
Elvis Presley was strongly connected to Nashville and recorded
approximately 260 songs at RCA Studio B in Nashville. He also
performed in several concerts in the area and, during his early
days, often came to Nashville to confer with his manager, Colonel
Tom Parker, who lived in Nashville.
As one of the most popular classical composers in the performance
repertoire of professional and amateur orchestras and choirs across
the world, Gustav Mahler continues to generate significant
interest, and the global appetite for his music, and for
discussions of it, remains large. Editor Jeremy Barham brings
together leading and emerging scholars in the field to explore
Mahler's relationship with music, media, and ideas past and
present, addressing issues in structural analysis, performance,
genres of stage, screen and literature, cultural movements,
aesthetics, history/historiography and temporal experience.
Rethinking Mahler counterbalances prevailing scholarly assumptions
and preferences that configure Mahler as proto-modernist, with
hitherto neglected consideration of his debt to, and his
re-imagining of, the legacies of his own historical past. Over the
course of 17 chapters drawing from a variety of disciplinary
perspectives, the book pursues ideas of nostalgia, historicism and
'pastness' in relation to an emergent modernity and subsequent
musical-cultural developments, yielding a wide-ranging exploration
and re-evaluation of Mahler's works, their historical reception and
understanding, and their resounding impact within diverse cultural
contexts. Rethinking Mahler will be an essential resource for
scholars and students of Mahler and late Romantic era music more
generally, and will also find an audience among the many devotees
of Mahler's music.
In a career that spanned nearly five decades, Dorothy Fields penned
the words to more than four hundred songs, among them mega-hits
such as "On the Sunny Side of the Street," "I Can't Give You
Anything But Love," "The Way You Look Tonight," and "If My Friends
could See Me Now." While Fields's name may be known mainly to
connoisseurs, her contributions to our popular culture--indeed, our
national consciousness--have been remarkable.
In I Feel a Song Coming On, Charlotte Greenspan offers the most
complete, serious treatment of Fields's life and work to date,
tracing her rise to prominence in a male-dominated world. Born in
1904 into a show business family--her father, Lou Fields, was a
famed vaudeville comedian turned Broadway producer--Fields first
teamed with songwriter Jimmy McHugh in the late 1920s and went on
to a series of Hollywood collaborations with Jerome Kern, including
the Fred Astaire-Ginger Rogers classic Swing Time. With her brother
Herbert, she co-authored the books for several of Cole Porter's
Broadway shows, as well as for Irving Berlin's phenomenally
successful Annie Get Your Gun. More stage hits would follow, among
them Redhead and Sweet Charity, as Fields remained active right up
to her death in 1974. Fields's lyrics--colloquial, urbane,
sometimes slangy, sometimes sensuous--won her high praise from
later generation songwriters including Stephen Sondheim and Fred
Ebb, and her stellar career opened a path for other women in her
profession, among them Betty Comden, Dory Previn, and Marilyn
Bergman.
Meticulously researched and filled with sharp insights, this
lively biography not only illuminates Fields's life but also offers
unique insights into the golden ageof popular song.
The Who defined a generation and rocked the world. "My Generation,"
"Pinball Wizard," and "Baba O'Riley" are some of the most well
known tracks in rock history. The rock opera Tommy, the
genre-defining Live at Leeds, and the classic Quadrophenia are just
some of The Who's albums.
A fascinating study of Brian Wilson's creative career as a
composer, producer, performer, and collaborator that addresses all
aspects of Brian's five-decade-long music career through his
creative methods and processes. The cofounder and central figure of
one of America's most successful vocal groups, The Beach Boys,
Brian Wilson is a standout artist with an astonishing volume of
diverse work spanning over half a century that serves as testament
to his creative output and influence on modern music. Today, Wilson
stands as a survivor of life challenges stemming from substance
abuse and mental illness and enjoys a revitalized career in which
he continues to create new works and perform around the world to
enthusiastic audiences in sold-out venues. This unique book covers
the breadth of Wilson's creative life as composer, producer,
performer, and collaborator, not only as a Beach Boy, but also as a
solo artist and collaborator with artists such as Jan and Dean, The
Honeys, Spring, The Castells, and The Hondells. The book also
surveys his less-examined work as a performer of the music of
George Gershwin, of the songs from Disney films, and of children's
books and movies. Because of its breadth, The Words and Music of
Brian Wilson will appeal both to dedicated and casual fans alike of
The Beach Boys and of Brian Wilson as well as to scholars in
popular music and American studies. Presents the first complete and
career-spanning biography of Brian Wilson and detailed examination
of his musical career Considers Wilson's work with The Beach Boys
and the many performers and bands with whom he collaborated as
producer, songwriter, and performer in a chronological narrative
instead of categorizing his work as "Beach Boys" and "Other"
Discusses Wilson's diverse musical activities as comprising equal
parts devoted to composition, production, performance, and
collaboration Sorts through various conflicting narratives about
Brian Wilson's career in order to provide an accurate account of
his creative chronology
Nino Rota is one of the most important composers in the history of
cinema. Both popular and prolific, he wrote some of the most
cherished and memorable of all film music - for The Godfather Parts
I and II, The Leopard, the Zeffirelli Shakespeares, nearly all of
Fellini and for more than 140 popular Italian movies. Yet his music
does not quite work in the way that we have come to assume music in
film works: it does not seek to draw us in and identify, nor to
overwhelm and excite us. In itself, in its pretty but reticent
melodies, its at once comic and touching rhythms, and in its
relation to what's on screen, Rota's music is close and
affectionate towards characters and events but still restrained,
not detached but ironically attached. In this major new study of
Rota's film career, Richard Dyer gives a detailed account of Rota's
aesthetic, suggesting it offers a new approach to how we understand
both film music and feeling and film more broadly. He also provides
a first full account in English of Rota's life and work, linking it
to notions of plagiarism and pastiche, genre and convention, irony
and narrative. Rota's practice is related to some of the major ways
music is used in film, including the motif, musical reference,
underscoring and the difference between diegetic and non-diegetic
music, revealing how Rota both conforms to and undermines standard
conceptions. In addition, Dyer considers the issue of gay cultural
production, Rota's favourte genre, comedy, and his productive
collaboration with the director Federico Fellini.
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