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Books > Music > Other types of music > Vocal music
Choral Scores is an anthology of music exemplifying distinctive
choral repertoire by the most noteworthy composers throughout the
history of Western music. A companion volume to Denis Shrock's
Choral Repertoire (Oxford 2009), it presents works of salient
importance to the development of choral music in Western culture,
representing the music of the composers, eras, and movements
discussed most prominently in that volume. Including 132
compositions by 124 different composers, each presented unabridged
and in full score, and spanning the entirety of Western music
history, from the medieval era through the twentieth century, and
into the twenty-first, Choral Scores is the most thorough, and
up-to-date collection of choral music available. Complete with an
appendix offering literal translations of texts, as well as
composer and genre indices, Choral Scores is an essential reference
for choral scholars, teachers, and students alike.
All children must have an opportunity to share the joy of choral
music participation - whether in school, church, or community
choirs. What happens before the singing begins, is critical to
supporting, sustaining, and nurturing choirs to give every child
the opportunity to experience the wonder of choral singing. Based
on years of experience conducting and teaching, Barbara Tagg brings
a wealth of practical information about ways of organizing choirs.
From classroom choirs, to mission statements, boards of directors,
commissioning, auditioning, and repertoire, Before the Singing will
inspire new ways of thinking about how choirs organize their daily
tasks. The collaborative community that surrounds a choir includes
conductors, music educators, church choir directors, board members,
volunteers, staff, administrators, and university students in music
education and nonprofit arts management degree programs. For all
these, Tagg offers a wealth of knowledge about creating a positive
environment to support artistry, creativity, dedication, and a
commitment to striving for excellence.
The Singer's Guide to German Diction is the essential foundation
for a complete course in German diction for singers, vocal coaches,
choral conductors, and anyone wishing to learn to learn the proper
pronunciation of High German. Written by Valentin Lanzrein and
Richard Cross, who each have years of experience on stage, in the
voice studio, and in the diction classroom, it provides an
all-encompassing and versatile reference for the rules of German
diction and their exceptions. Featuring an easily navigable format
that uses tables and charts to support a visual understanding of
the text, this guide allows the reader to find information on
diction rules and quick help with the formation of each sound. It
also places an emphasis on exceptions to the rules, which are
crucial in learning the proper pronunciation of any language.
Exceptions are not only provided with the diction rules, but are
also gathered in a specific section for ease of reference. A
glossary of difficult words, names, and exceptions is provided in
the appendix, along with a section on Latin pronounced in the
German manner. Extensive pronunciation exercises, as well as IPA
transcription worksheets and short examples from the vocal
literature, are used for practical application of the diction
rules, and feature musical exercises drawn from art song, opera,
and oratorio. The book's companion website supplements these
musical exercises with high-quality audio clips recorded by leading
professional singers, providing an invaluable resource for
independent study. A comprehensive companion for teachers,
students, and singers alike, The Singer's Guide to German Diction
brings German diction to life through its well-structured system of
practice and reference materials.
A History of Western Choral Music explores the various genres, key
composers, and influential works essential to the development of
the western choral tradition. Author Chester L. Alwes divides this
exploration into two volumes which move from Medieval music and the
Renaissance era up to the 21st century. Volume I surveys the choral
music of composers including Josquin, Palestrina, Purcell, Handel,
and J.S. Bach while detailing the stylistic, textual, and
extramusical considerations unique to the topics covered.
Consideration of Renaissance music includes both sacred and secular
works, specifically addressing the growth of sacred music, the rise
of secular music, and the proliferation of sacred polyphony from
Josquin to Palestrina. Discussion of the Baroque era is organized
by geographic location, exploring the spread of Baroque style from
Italy to German, France, and England. Volume I concludes by
examining the aesthetic underpinnings of the early Classical and
Romantic eras. Framing discussion within the political, religious,
cultural, philosophical, aesthetic, and technological contexts of
each era, A History of Western Choral Music offers readers
specialized insight into major composers and works while providing
a cohesive understanding of choral music's place in Western
history.
Founded in 1915 by the musicologist William Gillies Whittaker, the
Newcastle-upon-Tyne Bach Choir is one of the oldest Bach choirs in
the United Kingdom. This book celebrates the centenary of the choir
with a multi-author account of the choir's contributions to musical
life and the many personalities who made that possible. It contains
almost 200 illustrations, many of them not previously seen.
Marvelous Rise of Superheroes in Cinema: Evolution of the Genre
from Sequels to Universes addresses the superhero movie genre's
transformation between 1978 and 2019. To emphasize and illustrate
the conceptual and thematic transformation, the main conventions of
the genre are scanned through several periods, focusing on the
developmental age of the genre, including the dominant period of DC
Comics-based superhero movies (1978-1997) and the Marvel "boom"
(2000-2007), and the contemporary age. For this purpose, the book
traces the fundamentals of superheroes from the first appearance of
Superman in Action Comics #1 (1938) to the final installment of the
MCU's Phase 3, Spider-Man: Far From Home (2019). The transformation
has two significant points. First, the genre's main conventions
have been in a change. Second, the genre's focus has changed from
sequel filmmaking to the universe concept. The study investigates
the Marvel Cinematic Universe's dominant, leading, and major role
in the genre's evolutionary process. Besides, the future of the
superhero movie genre is questioned through the multiverse concept
to broaden an understanding of the genre's following directions.
A History of Western Choral Music explores the various genres, key
composers, and influential works essential to the development of
the western choral tradition. Author Chester L. Alwes divides this
exploration into two volumes which move from Medieval music and the
Renaissance era up to the 21st century. Volume II begins at the
transition from the Classical era to the Romantic, with an
examination of the major genres common to both periods. Exploring
the oratorio, part song, and dramatic music, it also offers a
thorough discussion of the choral symphony from Beethoven to
Mahler, through to the present day. It then delves into the choral
music of the twentieth century through discussions of the major
compositional approaches and philosophies that proliferated over
the course of the century, from impressionism to serialism,
neo-classicism to modernism, minimalism, and the avant-garde. It
also considers the emerging tendency towards nationalistic
composition amongst composers such as Bartok and Stravinsky, and
discusses in great detail the contemporary music of the United
States, and Great Britain. Framing discussion within the political,
religious, cultural, philosophical, aesthetic, and technological
contexts of each era, A History of Western Choral Music offers
readers specialized insight into major composers and works while
providing a cohesive understanding of choral music's place in
Western history.
The B-minor Mass has always represented a fascinating challenge to
musical scholarship. Composed over the course of Johann Sebastian
Bach's life, it is considered by many to be the composer's greatest
and most complex work. The fourteen essays assembled in this volume
originate from the International Symposium 'Understanding Bach's
B-minor mass' at which scholars from eighteen countries gathered to
debate the latest topics in the field. In revised and updated form,
they comprise a thorough and systematic study of Bach's Opus
Ultimum, including a wide range of discussions relating to the
Mass's historical background and contexts, structure and
proportion, sources and editions, and the reception of the work in
the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. In the light of
important new developments in the study of the piece, this
collection demonstrates the innovation and rigour for which Bach
scholarship has become known.
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Piae Cantiones
(Hardcover)
George Ratcliffe Woodward; Compiled by Jacobus Finno; Contributions by Theodoricus Petri Rutha
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R848
R737
Discovery Miles 7 370
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Late medieval motet texts are brimming with chimeras, centaurs and
other strange creatures. In The Monstrous New Art, Anna Zayaruznaya
explores the musical ramifications of this menagerie in the works
of composers Guillaume de Machaut, Philippe de Vitry, and their
contemporaries. Aligning the larger forms of motets with the broad
sacred and secular themes of their texts, Zayaruznaya shows how
monstrous or hybrid exempla are musically sculpted by rhythmic and
textural means. These divisive musical procedures point to the
contradictory aspects not only of explicitly monstrous bodies, but
of such apparently unified entities as the body politic, the
courtly lady, and the Holy Trinity. Zayaruznaya casts a new light
on medieval modes of musical representation, with profound
implications for broader disciplinary narratives about the history
of text-music relations, the emergence of musical unity, and the
ontology of the musical work.
An eye-opening reexamination of Handel's beloved religious oratorio
Every Easter, audiences across the globe thrill to performances of
Handel's "Hallelujah Chorus," but they would probably be appalled
to learn the full extent of the oratorio's anti-Judaic message. In
this pioneering study, respected musicologist Michael Marissen
examines Handel's masterwork and uncovers a disturbing message of
anti-Judaism buried within its joyous celebration of the divinity
of the Christ. Discovering previously unidentified historical
source materials enabled the author to investigate the
circumstances that led to the creation of the Messiah and expose
the hateful sentiments masked by magnificent musical
artistry-including the famed "Hallelujah Chorus," which rejoices in
the "dashing to pieces" of God's enemies, among them the "people of
Israel." Marissen's fascinating, provocative work offers musical
scholars and general readers alike an unsettling new appreciation
of one of the world's best-loved and most widely performed works of
religious music.
The first thorough examination of the most renowned and influential
organist in early twentieth-century Germany and of his complex
relationship to his country's tumultuous and shifting
sociopolitical landscape. In the course of a multifaceted career,
Karl Straube (1873-1950) rose to positions of immense cultural
authority in a German musical world caught in unprecedented
artistic and sociopolitical upheaval. Son of a German
harmonium-builder and an intellectually inclined English mother,
Straube established himself as Germany's iconic organ virtuoso by
the turn of the century. His upbringing in Bismarck's Berlin
encouraged him to develop intensive interests in world history and
politics. He quickly became a sought-after teacher, editor, and
confidante to composers and intellectuals, whose work he often
significantly influenced. As the eleventh successor to J. S. Bach
in the cantorate of St. Thomas School, Leipzig, he focused the
choir's mission as curator of Bach's works and, in the unstable
political climate of the interwar years, as international emissary
for German art. His fraught exit from the cantorate in 1939 bore
the scars of his Nazi affiliations and issued in a final decade of
struggle and disillusionment as German society collapsed.
Christopher Anderson's book presents the first richly detailed
examination of Karl Straube's remarkable life, situated against the
background of the dynamic and sometimes sinister nationalism that
informed it. Through extensive examination of primary sources,
Anderson reveals a brilliant yet deeply conflicted musician whose
influence until now has been recognized, even hailed, but little
understood.
From the Jim Crow world of 1920s Greenville, South Carolina, to Greenwich Village's Café Society in the '40s, to their 1974 Grammy-winning collaboration on "Loves Me Like a Rock," the Dixie Hummingbirds have been one of gospel's most durable and inspiring groups. Now, Jerry Zolten tells the Hummingbirds' fascinating story and with it the story of a changing music industry and a changing nation. When James Davis and his high-school friends starting singing together in a rural South Carolina church they could not have foreseen the road that was about to unfold before them. They began a ten-year jaunt of "wildcatting," traveling from town to town, working local radio stations, schools, and churches, struggling to make a name for themselves. By 1939 the a cappella singers were recording their four-part harmony spirituals on the prestigious Decca label. By 1942 they had moved north to Philadelphia and then New York where, backed by Lester Young's band, they regularly brought the house down at the city's first integrated nightclub, Café Society. From there the group rode a wave of popularity that would propel them to nation-wide tours, major record contracts, collaborations with Stevie Wonder and Paul Simon, and a career still vibrant today as they approach their seventy-fifth anniversary. Drawing generously on interviews with Hank Ballard, Otis Williams, and other artists who worked with the Hummingbirds, as well as with members James Davis, Ira Tucker, Howard Carroll, and many others, The Dixie Hummingbirds brings vividly to life the growth of a gospel group and of gospel music itself.
Providing a detailed analysis of Bach's Passions, this 2010 book
represents an important contribution to the debate about the
culture of 'classical music', its origins, priorities and survival.
The angles from which each chapter proceeds differ from those of a
traditional music guide, by examining the Passions in the light of
the mindsets of modernity, and their interplay with earlier models
of thought and belief. While the historical details of Bach's
composition, performance and theological context remain crucial,
the foremost concern of this study is to relate these works to a
historical context that may, in some threads at least, still be
relevant today. The central claim of the book is that the interplay
of traditional imperatives and those of early modernity renders
Bach's Passions particularly fascinating as artefacts that both
reflect and constitute some of the priorities and conditions of the
western world.
In lucid and engaging style, Stinson explores Bach's 'Great Eighteen' Organ Chorales - among Bach's most celebrated works for organ - from a wide range of historical and analytical perspectives, including the models used by Bach in conceiving the individual pieces, his subsequent compilation of these works into a collection, and his compositional process as preserved by the autograph manuscript. Stinson also considers various issues of performance practice, and provides the first comprehensive examination of the music's reception, its dissemination in manuscript and printed form, and its influence on such composers as Mendelssohn, Schumann, and Brahms.
(Amadeus). The subjects of this third volume range from survivors
of the so-called Golden Age of the 1890s, such as the formidable
Lotte Lehman, to those whom the 20th century has bequeathed to the
21st, such as Cecilia Bartoli and Ian Bostridge. This is a personal
selection that includes many of the great names, including
Melchior, heldentenor of the century, and Gigli, the most popular
Italian singer of his generation. The entire series (for this is
the final volume) ends with a chapter on Caruso, still widely
regarded as the greatest of all.Steane's critical essays seek out
the special qualities of each singer and relate them to wider
concerns in music and in life. His eloquent descriptions of the
nuances of the vocal art are wonderful examples of the best kind of
music appreciation. HARDCOVER.
Choral Voices: Ethnographic Imaginations of Sound and Sacrality is
about sacred and secular choirs in Goa and Shillong across
churches, seminaries, schools, auditoriums, classrooms, reality TV
shows, and festivals. Voice and genre emerge as social objects
annotated by tradition, nostalgia, and innovation. Piety literally
and metaphorically shapes the Christian lifeworld, predominantly
those belonging to the Presbyterian and Catholic denominations.
Indigeneity structures the political and cultural motifs in the
making of the Christian musical traditions. Located at the
intersection of Sociology, Anthropology, and Ethnomusicology, the
choral voices emplace 'affect' and the visual-aural dispatch. Thus,
sonic spectrum holds space for indigenous and global musicality.
This ethnographic work will be useful for scholars researching
music and sound studies, religious studies, cultural anthropology,
and sociology of India.
This survey of choral literature, written by American composers
from 1760 through the 1990s, examines nearly 3,000 pieces of choral
music written by over 300 composers. Along with a descriptive
analysis, the literature is placed within a historical perspective.
Familiar and less well-known composers and their music are
examined. The study seeks to remedy the superficial treatment
choral music is often given in standard textbooks on American music
and to acknowledge and expose the varied richness of the
literature.
Choral conductors and musicologists will appreciate the vast
repertory of choral music literature examined. Organized
chronologically, this study uniquely traces the development of
choral music literature throughout the centuries. A select
bibliography provides a useful guide for further research.
In 1714, the 29 year-old Johann Sebastian Bach was promoted to the
position of concertmaster at the ducal court of Weimar. This post
required him for the first time in his already established career
to produce a regular stream of church cantatas-one cantata every
four weeks. Among the most significant works of this period is Ich
hatte viel Bekummernis in meinem Herzen (Cantata 21). Generally
known in English as "I had much affliction," Cantata 21 draws from
several psalms and the Book of Revelations and offers a depiction
of the spiritual ascent of the soul from intense tribulation to joy
and exaltation. Although widely performed and loved by musicians,
Cantata 21 has endured much criticism from scholars and critics who
claim that the piece lacks organizational clarity and stylistic
coherence. In Tears into Wine, renowned Bach scholar Eric Chafe
challenges the scholarly consensus, arguing that Cantata 21 is an
exceptionally carefully designed work, and that it displays a
convergence of musical structure and theological purpose that is
paradigmatic of Bach's sacred work as a whole. Drawing on a wide
range of Lutheran theological writing, Chafe shows that Cantata 21
reaches beyond the scope of the individual liturgical occasion to
voice a breadth of meaning that encompasses much of the core of
Lutheran thought. Chafe artfully demonstrates that instead of
simply presenting a musical depiction of the soul's journey from
sorrow to bliss, Cantata 21 expresses the various stages of God's
revelation and their impact on the believing soul. As a result,
Chafe reveals that Cantata 21 has a formal design that mirrors
Lutheran belief in unfolding revelation, with the final movement
representing the work's "crown"-the goal toward which all of the
earlier movements are directed. Complete with full text
translations of the cantata and the liturgical readings that would
have accompanied it at the first performance, Tears into Wine is a
monumental book that is ideally suited for Bach scholars and
students, as well as those generally interested in the relationship
between theology and music.
for SATB and piano Mack Wilberg's calming and pensive Meditation is
an adaptation of Charles Gounod's famous Ave Maria which is itself
based on J.S. Bach's Prelude in C Major from the first book of The
Well-Tempered Clavier. The accompaniment is derived from the piano
solo transcription of Gounod's work by Georges Bizet. To the
piano's rising arpeggios and Gounod's melody, Wilberg has added a
gently weaving choral texture, setting the words 'Alleluia, Amen'.
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