|
Books > Arts & Architecture > Music > Musical instruments & instrumental ensembles > String instruments > General
This is a compact, composite and authoritative survey of the history and development of the cello from its origins to the present day. Its carefully structured series of thirteen essays deals with the history and construction of the cello and bow, discusses the careers of the most distinguished cellists through history, surveys the repertory of the instrument in unprecedented detail and reviews teaching methods, technical developments and issues of performance practice. It is the most comprehensive book ever to be published about the instrument.
This study is an analysis of the first three of Beethoven's late
quartets, Opp. 127, 132, and 130, commissioned by Prince Nikolai
Galitzin. The five late quartets, usually considered as a group,
were written in the same period as the "Missa solemnis" and the
Ninth Symphony, and are among the composer's most profound musical
statements. Daniel K. L. Chua believes that of the five quartets
the three that he studies trace a process of disintegration,
whereas the last two, Opp. 131 and 135, reintegrate the language
that Beethoven himself had destabilized.
Through analyses that unearth peculiar features characteristic
of the surface and of the deeper structures of the music, Chua
interprets the "Galitzin" quartets as radical critiques of both
music and society, a view first proposed by Theodore Adorno. From
this perspective, the quartets necessarily undo the act of analysis
as well, forcing the analytical traditions associated with Schenker
and Schoenberg to break up into an eclectic mixture of techniques.
Analysis itself thus becomes problematic and has to move in a
dialectical and paradoxical fashion in order to trace Beethoven's
logic of disintegration. The result is a new way of reading these
works that not only reflects the preoccupations of the German
Romantics of that time and the poststructuralists of today, but
also opens a discussion of cultural, political, and philosophical
issues.
Originally published in 1995.
The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand
technology to again make available previously out-of-print books
from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press.
These paperback editions preserve the original texts of these
important books while presenting them in durable paperback
editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly
increase access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the
thousands of books published by Princeton University Press since
its founding in 1905.
..". a valuable book. It is an important link between the
unknown ofthe Renaissance and the present." -- The Triangle of Mu
PhiEpsilon
"Straightforward practicality is the most
outstandingcharacteristic of this book." -- Continuo
..". a fineand very welcome book that is likely to remain the
high standard of lute continuoinstruction for some time to come."
-- Sixteenth CenturyJournal
In this extraordinarily broad survey, Nigel Northdiscusses the
history of the lute, the archlute, and the theorbo and gives
practicaladvice on technique, the choice of instrument for
particular music, and thepreparation of scores.
|
|