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Books > Arts & Architecture > Music > Other types of music > Light orchestral, dance & big band music
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
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In this generously illustrated book, world-renowned Yale art
historian Robert Farris Thompson gives us the definitive account of
tango, ""the" fabulous dance of the past hundred years-and the most
beautiful, in the opinion of Martha Graham."
Thompson traces tango's evolution in the nineteenth century under
European, Andalusian-Gaucho, and African influences through its
representations by Hollywood and dramatizations in dance halls
throughout the world. He shows us tango not only as brilliant
choreography but also as text, music, art, and philosophy of life.
Passionately argued and unparalleled in its research, its
synthesis, and its depth of understanding, "Tango: The Art History
of Love" is a monumental achievement.
(Book). Written by one of jazz journalism's best and most
knowledgeable critics, this book explores the full swing spectrum
from its origins in the 1920s through its current retro resurgence.
Features intriguing capsule biographies of 400 of the best
musicians, from classic artists like Duke Ellington and Benny
Goodman to retro swingers such as the Brian Setzer Orchestra and
Lavay Smith and the Red Hot Skillet Lickers, with each artist's
most notable CDs reviewed and rated, plus info on film appearances,
books, and hard-to-find recordings. Includes insightful essays that
explore this music's cultural impact, fun photos and swing
memorabilia.
From her childhood in Detroit to her professional career in New
York City, American composer Lucia Dlugoszewski (1925-2000) lived a
life of relentless creativity as a poet and writer, composer for
dance, theater, and film, and, eventually, choreographer. Forging
her own path after briefly studying with John Cage and Edgard
Varese, Dlugoszewski tackled the musical issues of her time. She
expanded sonic resources, invented instruments, brought new focus
to timbre and texture, collaborated with artists across
disciplines, and incorporated spiritual, psychological, and
philosophical influences into her work. Remembered today almost
solely as the musical director for the Erick Hawkins Dance Company,
Dlugoszewski's compositional output, writings on aesthetics,
creative relationships, and graphic poetry deserve careful
examination on their own terms within the history of American
experimental music.
Influenced by the elegant 18th-century harpsichord works of Couperin, Rameau and Scarlatti, Le Tombeau de Couperin consists of "Prelude," "Forlane," "Menuet," and "Rigaudon." The uninterrupted eight waltzes of Valses Nobles et Sentimentales, orchestrated in 1912 to serve as music for a ballet, abound with lilting rhythms and unexpected harmonic subtleties. This volume of two inspired works will be valued additions to the libraries of musicians, music lovers, and admirers of Ravel.
The forgotten history of the "all-girl" big bands of the World War
II era takes center stage in Sherrie Tucker's Swing Shift. American
demand for swing skyrocketed with the onslaught of war as
millions-isolated from loved ones-sought diversion, comfort, and
social contact through music and dance. Although all-female jazz
and dance bands had existed since the 1920s, now hundreds of such
groups, both African American and white, barnstormed ballrooms,
theaters, dance halls, military installations, and makeshift USO
stages on the home front and abroad. Filled with firsthand accounts
of more than a hundred women who performed during this era and
complemented by thorough-and eye-opening-archival research, Swing
Shift not only offers a history of this significant aspect of
American society and culture but also examines how and why whole
bands of dedicated and talented women musicians were dropped
from-or never inducted into-our national memory. Tucker's nuanced
presentation reveals who these remarkable women were, where and
when they began to play music, and how they navigated a sometimes
wild and bumpy road-including their experiences with gas and rubber
rationing, travel restrictions designed to prioritize
transportation for military needs, and Jim Crow laws and other
prejudices. She explains how the expanded opportunities brought by
the war, along with sudden increased publicity, created the
illusion that all female musicians-no matter how experienced or
talented-were "Swing Shift Maisies," 1940s slang for the
substitutes for the "real" workers (or musicians) who were away in
combat. Comparing the working conditions and public representations
of women musicians with figures such as Rosie the Riveter, WACs,
USO hostesses, pin-ups, and movie stars, Tucker chronicles the
careers of such bands as the International Sweethearts of Rhythm,
Phil Spitalny's Hours of Charm, The Darlings of Rhythm, and the
Sharon Rogers All-Girl Band.
Auf Grundlage dreier Zentralbegriffe aus der Musikanschauung der
ersten Halfte des 18. Jahrhunderts (Bild, Affekt, Inventio)
unternimmt der Autor eine Neuinterpretation der "Johannespassion"
Johann Sebastian Bachs. Konsequent wird dafur zudem erstmalig
versucht, eine Synthese aus Quellen der Musikasthetik und der
Froemmigkeitspraxis der Zeit herzustellen. Dies fuhrt in der Tat zu
einer ganzlich neuen Sicht auf das exemplarisch untersuchte Werk
und zur Rekonstruktion vieler jener Ideen, welche das
Textverstandnis der Zeit nahelegen.
Congratulations on a much needed book on the Big Band era,
especially from the viewpoint of the 'side man'. Having been one
for about eight years before becoming a 'leader' I can really
appreciate your approach. A bandleader is no better than the men
behind him and I have had some great ones, including of course Drew
Page."" - Freddy Martin Having lived behind the scenes during the
Big Band era of the thirties and forties, Page invites us to share
that era with him. An instrumentalist or sideman, in many touring
bands, he recounts friendships with now-famous as well as unknown
musicians who made American dance music. Like them, Drew Page loved
his music and the road. He did not want to stay in one place and
one job for thirty years, repeating one year or experience thirty
times. He wanted to see things, to observe people and places. After
a lifetime of traveling and music, ""every town began to seem like
home."" Page's life was touched with humor, disappointment,
triumph, and some tragedy. "" Perhaps it's the variety of my
experiences, none seeming to relate to the others, that has given
my life its discontinuity."" Certainly, discontinuity characterized
his daily life, but continuity- his music- characterized its
essence. Brought together by their art, the traveling bandmembers
were apt to encounter each other any place, any time, and so they
avoided goodbyes. ""I'll be seeing you.' That's the way I left
Harry James and the boys in the band,"" recalls Page. In this
well-illustrated autobiography, he tells us what it was like to
travel in the days before paved roads, and how the Great
Depression, the death of vaudeville, and World War II affected the
music business. He gives us anecdotes about the famous musicians he
worked with- Harry James, Red Nichols, Freddy Martin among others-
and he talks about his fellow sidemen. His narrative unrolls like a
scroll inscribed with the names of those who made American dance
music and jazz famous. Every music lover, nostalgia seeker, and
student of American culture will want to own this book.
Popular music may be viewed as primary documents of society, and
"America's Musical Pulse" documents the American experience as
recorded in popular sound. Whether jazz, blues, swing, country, or
rock, the music, the impulse behind it, and the reaction to it
reveal the attitudes of an era or generation. Always a major
preoccupation of students, music is often ignored by teaching
professionals, who might profitably channel this interest to
further understandings of American social history and such diverse
fields as sociology, political science, literature, communications,
and business as well as music.
In this interdisciplinary collection, scholars, educators, and
writers from a variety of fields and perspectives relate topics
concerning twentieth-century popular music to issues of politics,
class, economics, race, gender, and the social context. The focus
throughout is to place music in societal perspective and encourage
investigation of the complex issues behind the popular tunes,
rhythms, and lyrics.
Dance Music of the French Baroque brings together information on
rhythm from the interrelated fields of music, dance, poetry,
rhetoric, and philosophy. Part I is devoted to the various factors
involved in dance rhythms, including tempos, rhythmic feet, dance
steps, declamation of lyrics, instrumental articulation, and
performance of ornaments.
Part II describes in alphabetic order the fifteen most
frequently encountered dances of the period and identifies the most
typical performance of each in relation to the factors discussed in
Part I. With reference to numerous illustrations and musical
examples, it clearly conveys the manner in which the allemandes,
bourees, chaconnes, gigues, etc., may be executed. This practical
book presents a myriad of information in a form that is easy to use
yet as graceful as the dances it describes."
Alton Augustus Adams, Sr., was a musician, writer, hotelier, and
the first black bandmaster of the United States Navy. Born in the
Virgin Islands in 1889, Adams joined the U.S. military in 1917.
Although naval policy at the time restricted blacks to menial jobs,
Adams and his all-black ensemble provided a bridge between the
local population and their all-white naval administrators. His
memoirs, edited by Mark Clague, with a foreword by Samuel Floyd,
Jr., reveal an inspired activist who believed music could change
the world, mitigate racism, and bring prosperity to his island
home.
Monika Lilleike's performance analytic study on Hawaiian Hula
`Olapa reveals how this genuine performing art practice shapes and
transmits oral history via a distinct set of performative means of
framing and stylization. The intermedial confluence of performance
elements, sound, body and words instills an oscillating effect of
multisensory experience which echoes a deep rooted sense concerned
with place, distinct environmental features, and story line. The
study appeals to discussions on intermediality, metaphoricity, and
to an anthropology of the senses. It outlines practice as research
and embodied knowledge as tools to conduct performance analysis.
Here, for the first time, is a book which analyses popular music
from a musical, as opposed to a sociological, biographical, or
political point of view. Peter van der Merwe has made an extensive
survey of Western popular music in all its forms - blues, ragtime,
music hall, waltzes, marches, parlour ballads, folk music -
uncovering the common musical language which unites these disparate
styles. The book examines the split between `classical'
and`popular' Western music in the nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries, shedding light, in the process, on the `serious' music
of the time. With a wealth of musical illustrations ranging from
Strauss waltzes to Mississippi blues and from the Middle Ages to
the 1920s, the author lays bare the tangled roots of the popular
music of today in a book which is often provocative, always
readable, and outstandingly comprehensive in its scope.
How can contemporary dance contribute to a critical discourse on
age and ageing? Built on the premise that age(ing) is something we
practice and perform as individuals and as a society, Susanne
Martin asks for and develops strategies that allow dance artists to
do age(ing) differently. As a whole, this project is an artistic
research inquiry, which draws on and contributes to dance practice.
The study develops, discusses, and stages practices and
performances of age(ing) that offer alternatives to stereotypical
and normative age(ing) narratives, which are not only part of dance
but also of everyday culture.
First study of American women composers and attitudes towards women
musicians in the nineteenth century. Early American women composers
are barely represented in standard reference works, yet their
output constitutes a significant proportion of the bound sheet
music in the collections in the New York Public Library, Yale
University,Boston Public Library, and the New York Historical
Society that form the basis of this study. Beginning with the first
sheet music published by a woman in America, in the 1790s, the book
goes on to examine music by mid-nineteenthcentury composers,
including brief biographies of five prominent women active in the
1850s and 60s. Judith Tick is Professor of Music at Northeastern
University, Boston, Massachusetts.
Tango. A multidimensional expression of Argentine identity, one
that speaks to that nation's sense of disorientation, loss, and
terror. Yet the tango mesmerizes dancers and audiences alike
throughout the world. In Paper Tangos, Julie Taylor-a classically
trained dancer and anthropologist-examines the poetics of the tango
while describing her own quest to dance this most dramatic of
paired dances. Taylor, born in the United States, has lived much of
her adult life in Latin America. She has spent years studying the
tango in Buenos Aires, dancing during and after the terror of
military dictatorships. This book is at once an account of a life
lived crossing the borders of two distinct and complex cultures and
an exploration of the conflicting meanings of tango for women who
love the poetry of its movement yet feel uneasy with the roles it
bestows on the male and female dancers. Drawing parallels among the
violences of the Argentine Junta, the play with power inherent in
tango dancing, and her own experiences with violence both inside
and outside the intriguing tango culture, Taylor weaves the line
between engaging memoir and insightful cultural critique. Within
the contexts of tango's creative birth and contemporary
presentations, this book welcomes us directly into the tango
subculture and reveals the ways that personal, political, and
historical violence operate in our lives. The book's experimental
design includes photographs on every page, which form a flip-book
sequence of a tango. Not simply a book for tango dancers and fans,
Paper Tangos will reward students of Latin American studies,
cultural studies, anthropology, feminist studies, dance studies,
and the art of critical memoir.
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