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Books > Music > Western music, periods & styles > General
Offers performers, teachers and students new insights into
ornamentation.The Cello Suites of Johann Sebastian Bach contain
some one hundred trills, many open to diverse execution and more
than half sparking controversy among musicians. Now accomplished
cellist Jerome Carrington brings together and examines historically
informed interpretations of the trills and compares them with
contemporary performance practice. Carrington collects and
annotates every trill in the Cello Suites, examining each ornament
individually to find the most historically accurate solution for
its execution. For determining the form of each trill, he offers a
method that includes analysis of harmonic structure. Because no
autograph copy of the Cello Suites has survived, he undertakes a
detailed study of the manuscript of the Lute Suite in G minor,
which Bach adapted from Cello Suite No. 5, as a reference for
correcting errors and verifying harmonic and rhythmic details.
Bursting with new ideas, Trills in the Bach Cello Suites offers
insight for performers and music theorists alike. It will aid in
the interpretation of these classic works as it renews our
appreciation for Bach's genius.
Expression and truth are traditional opposites in Western thought:
expression supposedly refers to states of mind, truth to states of
affairs. "Expression and Truth" rejects this opposition and
proposes fluid new models of expression, truth, and knowledge with
broad application to the humanities. These models derive from five
theses that connect expression to description, cognition, the
presence and absence of speech, and the conjunction of address and
reply. The theses are linked by a concentration on musical
expression, regarded as the ideal case of expression in general,
and by fresh readings of Ludwig WittgensteinOCOs scattered but
important remarks about music. The result is a new conception of
expression as a primary means of knowing, acting on, and forming
the world.Recent years have seen the return of the claim that
musicOCOs power resides in its ineffability. In "Expression and
Truth," Lawrence Kramer presents his most elaborate response to
this claim. Drawing on philosophers such as Wittgenstein and on
close analyses of nineteenth-century compositions, Kramer
demonstrates how music operates as a medium for articulating
cultural meanings and that music matters too profoundly to be
cordoned off from the kinds of critical readings typically brought
to the other arts. A tour-de-force by one of musicologyOCOs most
influential thinkers.OCoSusan McClary, "Desire and Pleasure in
Seventeenth-Century Music."
English music studies often apply rigid classifications to musical
materials, their uses, their consumers, and performers. The
contributors to this volume argue that some performers and
manuscripts from the early modern era defy conventional
categorization as "amateur" or "professional," "native" or
"foreign." These leading scholars explore the circulation of music
and performers in early modern England, reconsidering previously
held ideas about the boundaries between locations of musical
performance and practice.
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