|
Showing 1 - 18 of
18 matches in All Departments
Almost fifty years since his passing, the music of Ralph Vaughan
Williams continues to captivate audiences around the world, evoking
the sound and spirit of folksong, and the image of rural landscape.
In Vaughan Williams on Music, we read the composer in his own
words, as he pursues two related ambitions: to create his own
musical language, and to make early twentieth-century England a
musical nation. Music lovers, students, and researchers alike will
find in this volume a substantial collection of the composer's
writings which either went unpublished or have been unavailable
since their initial publication. The book contains 102 items
written by the composer between 1897 and the year of his death,
1958, including articles for musical magazines, transcripts of
broadcasts, obituary notices, and program notes. This wide-ranging
material illuminates Vaughan Williams's work as a composer, and
highlights his numerous other roles as an active supporter of
amateur music-makers, a leader in the folksong revival, educator,
performer, campaigner for English music, and polemicist. By
addressing a variety of topics, Vaughan Williams reveals the
complex and volatile political, musical, and cultural contexts in
which he worked over a period of six decades. In these
circumstances, Vaughan Williams demonstrates the breadth of his
knowledge and the depth of his understanding, and his commitment to
communicating with a wide audience. His writings are purposely
accessible to reach this audience, permeated with central themes of
originality, folksong, a sense of history, and the importance of
self-expression. Moreover, the collection reveals the emergence of
Vaughan Williams's aesthetics of music during the early 1900s, as
he came to terms with the legacy of Brahms and Wagner in order to
develop his personal musical idiom. Vaughan Williams on Music is a
significant resource for scholars of both British music and the
history of British culture, as well as an enjoyable read for all
who love Vaughan Williams's music.
Research Methods for Cyber Security teaches scientific methods for
generating impactful knowledge, validating theories, and adding
critical rigor to the cyber security field. This book shows how to
develop a research plan, beginning by starting research with a
question, then offers an introduction to the broad range of useful
research methods for cyber security research: observational,
mathematical, experimental, and applied. Each research method
chapter concludes with recommended outlines and suggested templates
for submission to peer reviewed venues. This book concludes with
information on cross-cutting issues within cyber security research.
Cyber security research contends with numerous unique issues, such
as an extremely fast environment evolution, adversarial behavior,
and the merging of natural and social science phenomena. Research
Methods for Cyber Security addresses these concerns and much more
by teaching readers not only the process of science in the context
of cyber security research, but providing assistance in execution
of research as well.
Soil is a fundamental and critical, yet often overlooked, component
of terrestrial ecosystems. It is an extremely complex environment,
supporting levels of diversity far greater than any ecosystem above
ground. This book explores how soil structure develops and the
consequences this has for life underground. The effects of spatial
arrangement, of soil 's physical and biological components on their
interaction and function are used to demonstrate their roles in
ecosystem dynamics. Bringing together existing knowledge in the
areas of soil biology and physics, this book explores the key
characteristics of soil spatial architecture.
This collection of published and unpublished creative non-fiction
essays represents the lifelong reflections of a creatively
afflicted mind, from humorous to serious, extraordinary to
ordinary, biographical to metaphysical and other alliterations
lurking between the lines, all organized into thematic topics
including Homefront, Internal and External Travels, the title
section, Politics, and an eclectic Addendum.
Sylvia Solo is a seventh-grade student at an ultra-expensive
private school that she attends by virtue of a violin scholarship.
As part of a class assignment, Sylvia visits the Metropolitan
Museum's ancient Egyptian collection. While there in Perneb's tomb,
the lights go out. As she begins playing her violin, a guard
investigates, and his flashlight reveals ancient symbols carved
into the stone walls that look to Sylvia like musical notes. She
plays the notes and finds herself transported back to the Old
Kingdom of ancient Egypt. There, she meets Da'av and his cat
Teekay, who guide her on a brief romp into the underworld. Da'av is
a protege of Imhapknum, a priest trying to save the spiritual soul
of the kingdom from the ambitious Niphut, right-hand lady to the
aging Pharaoh. A young adult fantasy, the book can be enjoyed by
adults of any age with active imaginations.
Two homeless beggars meet on the streets of New York in the winter
of 1870. One is a handicapped Irish Civil War veteran with a low
self-esteem trying to find something in life to hang on to; the
other a confident, well-educated former slave trying to make the
most of his considerable potential as an accomplished chef. An
exploration of the two men's lives is augmented by images brought
to life through the magic of the ex-slave's cooking. During the
course of this exploration, and subsequent events, it becomes
apparent that the veteran has emerged from the war half slave and
the slave only half free. Rather than a historic drama, the play
comments on the present (often in humorous or absurd tones) through
parallels between the 1870s and current issues: homelessness,
growing extremes of wealth and poverty, corporate greed, a recent
controversial war, and racial/ethnic prejudices.
David Manning wrote A Brief History of the Recent Future in the mid
1970s with the idea of satirizing the present by forecasting the
most bizarre imaginable future. The result was a "verbally animated
cartoon" tracing the evolution of an apocalyptic conflict between
proponents of ganic garbage vs those advocating ficial garbage as
civilization's final energy resource. Along the way, the tale
introduces such absurdities as a credit-system economy; the Bronx
Sanitation Air Force; a 3,000-acre rubber-raft island named
Carabia; a news toaster that burns headlines onto breakfast bread;
and people metabolically transformed by Mango Tango, the core
building block of the artificial ecosystem. Resurrected from the
past, the book remains, after 35-plus years, a satiric fantasy, now
looking back at the odd events nobody knows transpired but brought
us to our increasingly dystopian state. Once the harbinger of a
future too ridiculous to contemplate, the original bizarre
predictions resonate more every day.
Labor Day 1989: Duncan Twist's sleazy client, Nick Varnish, has
loaned him a cottage overlooking the salt marshes of Dusktide
Beach, a barrier island in southeast North Carolina. Just to the
south lies Lorn Island, which is deserted, except for one ethereal
resident: the Kindred Spirit. Duncan accidentally encounters a
former lover, Tendency Specter, who introduces him to the Kindred
Spirit. In turn, the Kindred Spirit introduces him to an unnamed
person who has mysteriously disappeared. Intrigued as much by their
rekindling relationship as they are by the missing person, Duncan
and Tendency begin investigating. As they grapple with both the
growing mystery and each other, curious events continue to
interrupt both interests. A skeleton half-buried in the sand seems
to indicate murder... or maybe not. Or are there two skeletons? Is
the skeleton a murder victim or has it been there since the Civil
War? Only the Kindred Spirit knows the answers, and it's not
talking.
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
PublishingAcentsa -a centss Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age,
it may contain imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia
and flawed pages. Because we believe this work is culturally
important, we have made it available as part of our commitment to
protecting, preserving, and promoting the world's literature.
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for e
|
|