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Books > Arts & Architecture > Music > Theory of music & musicology > General
"On and Off the Bandstand" is a study of American history,
invention, and culture that focuses on the evolution of popular
music. Efforts to keep the best of the bandstand alive in the
twentieth century, as well as today, are enthusiastically
celebrated.
Before reliable lighting and central heating, entertainment
mainly occurred outdoors. Without microphones, a band performance
was the centerpiece of choice for numerous celebrations.
Outstanding conductors and musicians were major celebrities in
their day. The basic instrumentation and musical language remained
the same for over a hundred years-even as the venues moved indoors.
Without breaks in continuity, each phase moved smoothly to the
next, and newer artists respected their forbearers and cherished
their accomplishments. Marching bands, concert bands, ragtime
bands, and swing bands are still here today, but they have retired
to the background.
The band era was accompanied by some remarkable innovations,
such as sound recording and radio. These technologies played a
crucial role and receive considerable attention as the story
unfolds. In addition to its historical contributions, "On and Off
the Bandstand" pays tribute to a handful of dedicated individuals
who have become advocates for the music of their parents' and
grandparents' time.
The Evolution of Electronic Dance Music establishes EDM's place on
the map of popular music. The book accounts for various
ambiguities, variations, transformations, and manifestations of
EDM, pertaining to its generic fragmentation, large geographical
spread, modes of consumption and, changes in technology. It focuses
especially on its current state, its future, and its borders -
between EDM and other forms of electronic music, as well as other
forms of popular music. It accounts for the rise of EDM in places
that are overlooked by the existing literature, such as Russia and
Eastern Europe, and examines the multi-media and visual aspects
such as the way EDM events music are staged and the specificity of
EDM music videos. Divided into four parts - concepts, technology,
celebrity, and consumption - this book takes a holistic look at the
many sides of EDM culture.
This was the first attempt at a full length biography of Bach and a
critical apreciation of his work as composer and performer.
Translated by Walter Emery in 1941-1942 with introductory notes and
two appendices, but not published in his lifetime. Walter Emery,
musicologist, specialised in the works J.S. Bach.
The future of music archiving and search engines lies in deep
learning and big data. Music information retrieval algorithms
automatically analyze musical features like timbre, melody, rhythm
or musical form, and artificial intelligence then sorts and relates
these features. At the first International Symposium on
Computational Ethnomusicological Archiving held on November 9 to
11, 2017 at the Institute of Systematic Musicology in Hamburg,
Germany, a new Computational Phonogram Archiving standard was
discussed as an interdisciplinary approach. Ethnomusicologists,
music and computer scientists, systematic musicologists as well as
music archivists, composers and musicians presented tools, methods
and platforms and shared fieldwork and archiving experiences in the
fields of musical acoustics, informatics, music theory as well as
on music storage, reproduction and metadata. The Computational
Phonogram Archiving standard is also in high demand in the music
market as a search engine for music consumers. This book offers a
comprehensive overview of the field written by leading researchers
around the globe.
In Resonant Matter, Lutz Koepnick considers contemporary sound and
installation art as a unique laboratory of hospitality amid
inhospitable times. Inspired by Ragnar Kjartansson’s nine-channel
video installation The Visitors (2012), the book explores
resonance—the ability of objects to be affected by the vibrations
of other objects—as a model of art’s fleeting promise to make
us coexist with things strange and other. In a series of nuanced
readings, Koepnick follows the echoes of distant, unexpected, and
unheard sounds in twenty-first century art to reflect on the
attachments we pursue to sustain our lives and the walls we need to
tear down to secure possible futures. The book’s nine chapters
approach The Visitors from ever-different conceptual angles while
bringing it into dialogue with the work of other artists and
musicians such as Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Guillermo Galindo, Mischa
Kuball, Philipp Lachenmann, Alvien Lucier, Teresa Margolles,
Carsten Nicolai, Camille Norment, Susan Philipsz, David Rothenberg,
Juliana Snapper, and Tanya Tagaq. With this book, Koepnick situates
resonance as a vital concept of contemporary art criticism and
sound studies. His analysis encourages us not only to expand our
understanding of the role of sound in art, of sound art, but to
attune our critical encounter with art to art’s own resonant
thinking.
Popular music and masculinity have rarely been examined through the
lens of research into monstrosity. The discourses associated with
rock and pop, however, actually include more ‘monsters’ than
might at first be imagined. Attention to such individuals and
cultures can say things about the operation of genre and gender,
myth and meaning. Indeed, monstrosity has recently become a growing
focus of cultural theory. This is in part because monsters raise
shared concerns about transgression, subjectivity, agency, and
community. Attention to monstrosity evokes both the spectre of
projection (which invokes familial trauma and psychoanalysis) and
shared anxieties (that in turn reflect ideologies and beliefs). By
pursuing a series of insightful case studies, Scary Monsters
considers different aspects of the connection between music, gender
and monstrosity. Its argument is that attention to monstrosity
provides a unique perspective on the study of masculinity in
popular music culture.
Burney is recognised as the great musical writer of his day. This
is a facsimile reprint of the first edition in 1771.
Exposing the depth of two major artists' philosophies, creative
visions, stylistic tendencies, and contributions to their craft,
this unprecedented comparative analysis synthesizes biographical
material, critical interpretation, and selected exemplars of the
writers' work. Smith reinterprets their work in a new and
fascinating light, presenting Dylan as a songwriter of enigmatic
wordplay and Springsteen as the melodramatic narrator of a specific
community's life struggles.
Both songwriters have had unique responses to the celebrity
singer/songwriter tradition begun by Woody Guthrie. Smith reveals
the power of authorship and the creative drive necessary to
negotiate an artistic vision through the complicated mechanisms of
the world of commercial art. Both have discovered their own means
of traveling this difficult terrain, and Smith probes their lives
and work to reveal the myriad ways in which two distinct, equally
significant artists have learned from and contributed to an ongoing
and important American musical tradition.
Beyond its elucidation and critique of traditional
'notation-centric' musicology, this book's primary emphasis is on
the negotiation and construction of meaning within the extended
musical multimedia works of the classic British group Pink Floyd.
Encompassing the concept albums that the group released from 1973
to 1983, during Roger Waters' final period with the band, chapters
are devoted to Dark Side of the Moon (1973), Wish You Were Here
(1975), Animals (1977), The Wall (1979) and The Final Cut (1983),
along with Waters' third solo album Amused to Death (1993). This
book's analysis of album covers, lyrics, music and film makes use
of techniques of literary and film criticism, while employing the
combined lenses of musical hermeneutics and discourse analysis, so
as to illustrate how sonic and musical information contribute to
listeners' interpretations of the discerning messages of these
monumental musical artifacts. Ultimately, it demonstrates how their
words, sounds, and images work together in order to communicate one
fundamental concern, which-to paraphrase the music journalist Karl
Dallas-is to affirm human values against everything in life that
should conspire against them.
Honoring God and the City is a documentary history of musical activities at Venetian lay confraternities from their origins in the thirteenth century to their suppression in the early nineteenth, demonstrating the vital role they played in the cultural life of Venice.
In this first monograph on E. T. A. Hoffmann and opera, Francien
Markx examines Hoffmann's writings on opera and the challenges they
pose to established narratives of aesthetic autonomy, the search
for a national opera, and Hoffmann's biography. Markx discusses
Hoffmann's lifelong fascination with opera against the backdrop of
eighteenth-century theater reform, the creation of national
identity, contemporary performance practices and musical and
aesthetic discourses as voiced by C. M. von Weber, A. W. Schlegel,
Heine, and Wagner, among others. The book reconsiders the
traditional view that German opera followed a deterministic
trajectory toward Wagner's Gesamtkunstwerk and reveals a
cosmopolitan spirit in Hoffmann's operatic vision, most notably
exemplified by his controversial advocacy for Spontini in Berlin.
CLASSICAL COOKS: A GASTROHISTORY OF WESTERN MUSIC by Ira Braus The
expression, "Classical music is an acquired taste" takes on new
meaning in Ira Braus's Classical Cooks: A Gastrohistory of Western
Music. Unlike most classical music guides, Classical Cooks links
music and food synaesthetically. Synaesthesia means experiencing
one sense modality by stimulating another, such as "hearing"
colors. Music and food, as my book shows, are close enough
aesthetically, so that we can enjoy them synaesthetically. The book
correlates the respective musical and culinary talents of composers
living between 1350 and 2000; it also suggests ways for listeners
to distinguish composers' styles by way of gastro-musical
association. Classical Cooks complements a recent line of books
dealing with food and culture, e.g., The Toulouse Lautrec Cookbook,
Keats's Porridge, and Jazz Cooks. To be sure, American orchestras,
like the Boston Symphony and New York Philharmonic, have published
recipes contributed by their players. But no substantial anthology
of composer recipes has thus far appeared. Classical Cooks has
Three Courses, plus Dessert. Course 1, "Why Musicians Love to Talk
Shop in the Kitchen," matches food categories with musical ones.
Take fat. Musicians associate fat with lush, full-bodied
orchestration as we hear in, say, Hollywood scores of the 1950s.
These composers learned their craft from lipid composers like
Puccini and Debussy. Puccini's "fat," mellifluous as it is, may be
compared to olive oil - clear, fruity, digestible, while Debussy's
is voluptuous, like butter - filmy, artery-clogging, and
delectable. Course 2, "A Gastrohistory of Music in Documents"
offers accounts of composers as gastro-nomes. Beethoven's culinary
disasters are juxtaposed with Rossini's haute cuisine, so haute in
fact, that one of his recipes ("Tournedos Rossini") appears in
Larousse Gastronomique. One also reads stories of Liszt's
food-fights with his pupils and of his chiding the American
pianist, Amy Fay, for "making an omelette" when playing
wrist-bending passages in his piano music. Course 3, "You Eat What
you Compose, or, Will the Real Mozart Please Stand Up?" addresses
riddles of music history: how knowledge of Mozart's favorite foods
-- liver dumplings and sauerkraut -- might revise his popular image
as a composer of "sweet" music, e.g. Eine kleine Nachtmusik; how a
gastronomic kinship between J.S. Bach and Brahms -- their love of
herring -- might reflect their dense musical expression, as well as
Brahms's composing minuets and sarabandes during the mid-1800s; and
how knowing Ravel's preference for "hot" food helps us to
distinguish the sound of his music from the more understated style
of Debussy. Dessert comprises "The Well-Tempered Cuisinier:
Twenty-four Pastries and Foods from the Classical Cooks." Readers
will find here a combination of recipes and menus suitable for
diverse musical occasions (concert receptions, composer birthdays,
opera caf entres).
Sebastien Erard's (1752-1831) inventions have had an enormous
impact on instruments and musical life and are still at the
foundation of piano building today. Drawing on an unusually rich
set of archives from both the Erard firm and the Erard family,
author Robert Adelson shows how the Erard piano played an important
and often leading role in the history of the instrument, beginning
in the late eighteenth century and continuing into the final
decades of the nineteenth. The Erards were the first piano builders
in France to prioritise the more sonorous grand piano, sending
gifts of their new model to both Haydn and Beethoven. Erard's
famous double-escapement action, which improved the instrument's
response while at the same time producing a more powerful tone,
revolutionised both piano construction and repertoire. Thanks to
these inventions, the Erard firm developed close relationships with
the greatest pianist composers of the nineteenth century, including
Hummel, Liszt, Moscheles and Mendelssohn. The book also presents
new evidence concerning Pierre Erard's homosexuality, which helps
us to understand his reluctance to found a family to carry on the
Erard tradition, a reluctance that would spell the end of the
golden era of the firm and lead to its eventual demise. The book
closes with the story of Pierre's widow Camille, who directed the
firm from 1855 until 1889. Her influential position in the
male-dominated world of instrument building was unique for a woman
of her time.
This is the largest life-and-works of Musorgsky ever to have appeared outside Russia. Musorgsky created stunning masterpieces in such creations as his opera Boris Godunov and piano suite Pictures at an Exhibition - yet his life was tragic. It is this pathetic tale, interlaced with critical discussion of music, that is this book's concern.
An accessible exploration of an important and understudied music theory topic, Swain's book examines the dimensional technique of analyzing harmonic rhythm. Simply defined, harmonic rhythm is the relationship between changes in harmony and perceived changes in rhythm. This phenomenon plays a large role in shaping the texture and style of much of Western music, from Renaissance polyphonic pieces to the works of Debussy. In Harmonic Rhythm, Joseph Swain revists this neglected theoretical concept, providing a clear and thorough explanation of how harmonic theory works. Using a small core of repeated musical examples, Swain explores the theory's crucial components including functional and non functional harmonies, harmonic tension and harmonic speed. In addition, swain outlines a method for "dimensional analysis" of musical works; taking both ryhthm and harmony into account, he shows readers how to achieve a more thorough understanding of and appreciation for the texture of music.
When did Russia become "modern?" Historians of Russia - including
even many Russian historians - have long tried to identify Russia's
"modern" moment. While most scholars have looked to economic or
ideological transitions, noted historian and critic Paul du Quenoy
approaches the problem through culture, and specifically the
performing arts, as told through the prism of one of its leading
nineteenth-century practitioners, the composer and critic Alexander
Serov. Born in 1820, Serov grew to adulthood under the reign of
Tsar Nicholas I (1825-1855). Long disparaged as a dark and
reactionary period of Russia's past, it instead offered many
educational, cultural, and professional opportunities that
conventional histories have failed to appreciate. Educated in law
and tutored in music, Serov rose to become Russia's first
significant music critic and a noted composer whose three operas
won him fame and gestured toward the creation of a national style.
Although his renown was fleeting after his untimely death in 1871,
his life and observations provide a vital eyewitness account to a
Russia poised to embrace a fresh and fully modern identity. In a
new and revised edition prepared to mark the 150th anniversary of
Serov's death, du Quenoy's pastiche of Russian life offers one of
the best approaches to Russia's imperial past and its legacies
today.
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