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Books > Music > Musical instruments & instrumental ensembles > Wind instruments > General
Choice Magazine (a major library review magazine): "After an
introductory section on the history of the piano, particularly as
reflected in and influenced by works of the major composers for the
instrument, this interesting and informative book describes various
compositional "schools," from Austro-German, French, and Italian
through English, American, Russian, Spanish, Japanese, and others.
This section constitutes a brief course in music history beginning
with the Renaissance. ... The body of the work consists of
historical and stylistic sketches of 17 composers, with brief
remarks about several works of each, and lists of selected works,
ending with a complete work or movement. These sketches are
exceptionally well written, assuming an intelligent reader, and
convey a great deal of information concisely.... this book contains
much well-organized and useful material. For libraries serving
serious amateur pianists, high school upward. ******************
Booklist (The book review magazine of the American Library
Association): This authoritative volume will make a solid addition
to the public library music collection. After offering a brief
opening chapter on the evolution of the piano as instrument and the
changing styles of technique, author Pat Hammond provides
opinionated but well-reasoned analyses of the works of the major
piano composers, with focus on the Baroque era (Bach and Handel),
the Classical age (Haydn, Mozart Beethoven), Romanticism (Schubert,
Chopin Liszt, and others), Impressionism (Debussy) and Modernism
(Bartok). This book's unique feature is its inclusion of musical
examples of each composer's work, which are meant to be played as
one reads along. Pertinent biographical material is also featured
for the great masters. Appendixes include a suggested
twentieth-century piano repertoire and a bibliography. Piano music
- Bibliography ******************* Clavier Magazine "Compiled and
annotated by Patricia Fallows-Hammond. Suitable as a reference
source, this handbook supplies concise biographical and stylistic
sketches of composers and annotation of selected compositions. ...
Fallows-Hammond has a knack for setting and maintaining an
appropriate level of sophistication. Writing in a crisp, direct
style, she steers the student toward complicated subjects and gives
them a palpable hold on them. To explain the concept of the
concerto grosso, for example, she explains that, "In Handel's time,
Concerto Crosso meant a small group of instruments playing in
contrast to a larger body of strings." Her synopsis of the
development of sonata form is equally apt....Commentary on the
composers is well-researched and written at a uniform level of
detail that will make it useful to a wide
audience....Fallows-Hammond does a good job of compiling accurate
information on the composers she has chosen. If the contents of the
book serve your purposes, you will find this handbook a handy
reference source. " **************** The American Organist "The
author has created a self-instruction course which gives
information about the evolution of the piano and changing styles in
piano technique, and then discusses topics with emphasis on special
composers: ..... Piano students seeking background information will
profit from this book. Recommended for public libraries."
******************** Keyboard Magazine "Patricia Fallow-Hammond's
302 page study embraces the proposition that historical context is
an important, and frequently neglected, element in building an
understanding of classical repertoire. .... she has assembled a
fairly basic catalogue of keyboard works, arranged chronologically
by composer, and preceded each list with a short biography relating
milestones from each composer's life. ....... Her decision to
further enlighten the reader with short samples of their handiwork
is a happy extra addition. Her efficiency at summarizing and
packaging that line is what makes her debut in print a success."
The French flute player and conductor Paul Taffanel (1844-1908) was
an extraordinary virtuoso and a major figure in fin-de-siecle
Parisian musical life. Based on a treasure trove of private
documents of Taffanel's previously unpublished letters and papers,
Taffanel: Genius of the Flute
recounts the rich story of his multi-faceted career as a player,
conductor, composer, teacher, and leader of musical organizations.
As a player, Taffanel had a rare vision of the flute as a serious,
expressive instrument and his name sits at the center of the
extraordinary lineage of flutists. At a crucial moment in the
flute's history -- after it had been completely remodeled by
Theobald Boehm -- Taffanel had far-ranging
influence, creating the modern French school of playing which has
since been widely adopted throughout the world, and re-establishing
the instrument in the mainstream of music. Taffanel was also an
inspiring teacher at the Paris Conservatoire, to whom many modern
flutists can trace their roots.
Taffanel also pioneered a renaissance in playing and composing
chamber music for wind instruments. He founded the Societe de
musique de chambre pour instruments a vent (Society of Chamber
Music for Wind Instruments) in 1879, reviving the wind ensemble
music of Mozart and Beethoven, and stimulating
the composition of many new works, among them Gounod's Petite
symphonie. The ensemble broke the dominance of piano and strings in
recital and chamber music and fostered many of the canonic works in
that repertoire.
Although foremost a flutist and teacher, Taffanel was also an
important opera and orchestra conductor, virtually without rival in
Paris. From 1890, he served as chiefconductor at the Paris Opera
and the Society des concerts du Conservatoire (Paris Conservatory
Orchestra) - the first time a flutist,
rather then a string player, had been appointed to such key
positions. At the Opera he was charged with all new productions and
gave notable French premieres of various Wagner operas and Verdi's
Otello. At the Societe des concerts he championed contemporary
French composers, particularly his great
friend Saint-Saens, and gave the world premiere of Verdi's Sacred
Pieces.
Beyond his work as a performer, teacher and conductor, Taffanel was
a fluent composer for the flute and wind quintet, a formidable
administrator of several musical organizations, and was a major
personality in Parisian musical life. Blakeman expertly places
Taffanel's story in the rich political and
cultural backdrop of the time, evoking Conservatoire intrigues, the
Societe des concerts, and Taffanel's relationships with various
musicians and major composers. Blakeman details the circumstances
surrounding landmark commissions, performances, and repertoire, and
weaves the details from Taffanel's
correspondence with first-person interviews and flute lore. What
emerges is a portrait of an all-round musician who was also a
modest and genial man.
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