|
Showing 1 - 13 of
13 matches in All Departments
English eighteenth-century music is comparatively neglected as an
academic topic despite its increasing popularity with listeners,
both on record and in the concert hall. Yet England in the
eighteenth century was the scene of the liveliest and most various
musical activity. The essays in this book, by leading English and
American scholars, are devoted to the social and intellectual
background, and to the composers who dominated the period,
including Handel and Haydn.
In Essays in Honor of Christopher Hogwood: The Maestro's Direction,
Thomas Donahue has collected several essays from authors who have
been motivated and inspired by the distinguished keyboard player,
music editor, writer, and conductor, Christopher Hogwood, in honor
of his 70th birthday in 2011. As is clearly shown in the assembled
articles, Hogwood has had considerable influence in the latter half
of the 20th century in advocating the historically informed
performance of early music. Contributions from such scholars as Yo
Tomita, Richard Troeger, Sabine K. Klaus, Bridget Cunningham, and
Annette Richards pay tribute to this major musician of the 20th
century, one of the strongest advocates for the performance of
early music. The volume begins with a foreword by Bernard Brauchli,
followed by a chronology of Hogwood's education and career,
including his publications and awards. The succeeding essays cover
a variety of subjects associated with Hogwood's approach to early
music, including the interpretation of composers' notations,
discussions of musical instrument construction and use, elucidation
of performance traditions and conventions of the past, and analysis
of the music itself. The essays provide insights on the music of
Handel, Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, and J.S. and C.P.E. Bach and
consider various keyboard instruments such as the clavichord,
square piano, spinet, and claviorgan. An afterword by Hogwood
himself completes this well rounded collection.
This handbook covers Handel's best known public music, the Water
Music, written at the outset of his English career, and the Music
for the Royal Fireworks, the last and largest of his orchestral
creations. The genesis of these two orchestral suites is examined
in its political as well as musical context; practical questions of
performance style and interpretation are balanced by an enquiry
into Handel's compositional processes, and the relationship of his
other large-scale orchestral compositions, especially the Concerti
a due cori, to these suites. Original source material is set
alongside the most recent theories on Handel's character and
working methods. In particular the problem of 'borrowings' is
addressed with reference to most recent identifications of Handel's
sources, together with the later presentation of these works in the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries, with an account of recordings,
editions and a summary of performance questions.
Twelve of today's most distinguished scholar-performers offer
essays in this volume on new and intriguing aspects of baroque
keyboard music. Topics include fresh evidence on music of the
seventeenth century (Frescobaldi, Froberger and Purcell), the place
of the keyboard in concerted music and on comparative teaching
methods (Couperin, Marpurg and Roeser), studies of the repertoire
of J. S. Bach and his sons (including ornamentation in C. P. E.
Bach and the Polonaises of Wilhelm Friedemann), and writing on the
later eighteenth century (including Mozart) and on matters of
repertoire and performance practice (continuo playing,
improvisation). The volume gives a balanced picture of the latest
theories and discoveries in keyboard music, of interest to both
academic and performing musicians, and includes a new arrangement
for keyboard of Bach's D minor Violin Partita, published here for
the first time.
This handbook covers Handel's best known public music, the Water
Music, written at the outset of his English career, and the Music
for the Royal Fireworks, the last and largest of his orchestral
creations. The genesis of these two orchestral suites is examined
in its political as well as musical context; practical questions of
performance style and interpretation are balanced by an enquiry
into Handel's compositional processes, and the relationship of his
other large-scale orchestral compositions, especially the Concerti
a due cori, to these suites. Original source material is set
alongside the most recent theories on Handel's character and
working methods. In particular the problem of 'borrowings' is
addressed with reference to most recent identifications of Handel's
sources, together with the later presentation of these works in the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries, with an account of recordings,
editions and a summary of performance questions.
The clavichord, forerunner of the piano, was one of the most
important instruments in Western keyboard history until the first
decades of the nineteenth century. Bernard Brauchli's comprehensive
history fills a major gap in the literature on this instrument.
Beginning with the earliest-known references, he traces the
clavichord's evolution up to the mid-nineteenth century, ending
with a study of performance technique. The clavichord's structural
developments (traced largely through an analysis of extant
instruments), literary documentation (much of it presented here for
the first time in English), treatises and iconographical sources
are presented in chronological order. What emerges from this study
of the various sources is an overview of the essential role this
instrument played both socially and musically for more than four
centuries, restoring the clavichord to the position it justly
deserves in history. Awarded the Nicholas Bessaraboff Prize for
2001, honoring the best book-length organological study in the
English language published in 1998/99.
This stimulating guide will help students and their teachers to
achieve stylish performances of music of the Baroque period.
Individual chapters from leading experts focus on historical
background, notation and interpretation, and sources and editions,
presenting the latest thinking on performance in a clear, helpful
and practical way. There are also dedicated chapters of specialist
advice for keyboard, string and wind players, and singers, plus a
recommended playlist of illustrative, authoritative recordings.
Fully illustrated throughout with many music examples, facsimiles
and pictures, this is a valuable resource for students of the
Baroque period which will also add to the knowledge and
understanding of amateur and professional musicians.
|
You may like...
Hauntings
Niq Mhlongo
Paperback
R250
R195
Discovery Miles 1 950
|