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Books > Arts & Architecture > Music > Musical instruments & instrumental ensembles > String instruments > General
This book is a concise guide to the technical principles upon which
the best current practice in guitar playing is founded. It deals
clearly with all practical aspects of playing--posture, tone
production, position changing, chord playing, and coordination--and
offers advice on interpretation and practicing. It includes a
selected repertoire list and a most useful appendix, "Writing for
the Guitar," by the composer Stephen Dodgson.
Beethoven's Cello is the ideal companion for cellists, pianists,
musicologists and chamber-music devotees desiring a comprehensive
understanding of this beloved repertoire. Winner of the 2018 CHOICE
Outstanding Academic Title Award In 1796 the young Beethoven
presented his first two cello sonatas, Op. 5, at the court of
Frederick William II, an avid cellist and the reigning Prussian
monarch. Released in print the next year, these revolutionary
sonatas forever altered the cello repertoire by fundamentally
redefining the relationship between the cello and the piano and
promoting their parity. Beethoven continued to develop the
potential of the duo partnership in his three other cello sonatas -
the lyrical and heroic Op. 69 and the two experimental sonatas Op.
102, No. 1 and No. 2, transcendent compositions conceived on the
threshold of the composer's late style. In Beethoven's Cello, Marc
D. Moskovitz and R. Larry Todd examine these seminal cornerstones
of the cello repertoire and place them within their historical and
cultural contexts. Also addressed arethe three variation sets and,
in a series of interludes, the cellos owned by Beethoven, the
changing nature of his pianos, the cello-centric 'Triple' Concerto
and the arrangements for cello and piano of other works. Featuring
a preface by renowned cellist Steven Isserlis and concluding with
the reviews of the composer's cello music published during his
lifetime, Beethoven's Cello is the ideal companion for cellists,
pianists, musicologists and chamber-music devotees desiring a
comprehensive understanding of this beloved repertoire. MARC D.
MOSKOVITZ is principal cellist of the ProMusica Chamber Orchestra.
He has recorded the music of virtuoso cellists David Popperand
Alfredo Piatti for the VAI label, and his American premiere of
Zemlinsky's Cello Sonata was heralded by the Washington Post as 'an
impassioned performance'. Moskovitz has contributed to the New
Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians; and his biography,
Alexander Zemlinsky: A Lyric Symphony, was published by Boydell
& Brewer in 2010. Recognized as 'Mendelssohn's most
authoritative biographer' (The New Yorker), R. LARRY TODD is Arts
and Sciences Professor at Duke University. He is the author of
Mendelssohn: A Life in Music, named Best Biography in 2003 by the
Association of American Publishers, and Fanny Hensel: The Other
Mendelssohn, awarded the ASCAP Nicholas Slonimsky Award for
outstanding biography in music. As a pianist, he has recorded with
Nancy Green the complete cello works of Mendelssohn and Fanny
Hensel for JRI Recordings.
This is the first book-length study in any language dedicated
specifically to lute, guitar, and vihuela performance. Written by
specialists of this music, it is intended for players, teachers,
and scholars who are interested both in the history of performance,
and in the specific interpretation of lute, guitar and vihuela
music from the end of the fifteenth century to approximately 1850.
It brings to light various new ideas about performance and
technique for a wide range of instruments, including the
fifteenth-, sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Italian lute,
archlute, theorbo, French Baroque lute, vihuela, and Baroque and
classical guitar, as well as for lute-accompanied English and
Italian song. The articles in this book decode the unwritten
traditions of these instruments, and examine various performance
issues, taking a fresh, innovative look at traditional problems.
John Williams, in his foreword to this book, points to the unique
position of the guitar in the development of Western music. Its
strength has always been as a popular instrument, yet it can also
form a bridge between the popular and the classical tradition. In
this valuable guide for players and teachers, Stimpson, himself an
accomplished performer, has assembled an impressive list of
experts. Their contributions bring together the various aspects of
teaching, repertoire, and technique, embracing not only the
classical tradition, but also the essentials of lead, bass, folk,
flamenco, and jass guitar in a handbook of unparalleled scope and
authority.
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