|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
The British composer, conductor, and pianist Thomas Ades has
achieved a level of recognition and celebrity within the world of
classical music today that is almost unmatched. Once seen as the
heir to Benjamin Britten, both in his importance to British music
and his reputation as the enfant terrible of the concert world,
Ades is a fascinating figure of contemporary composition. Reaching
for the music behind the celebrity, author Drew Massey deftly
tackles the challenges of writing about a living figure with such
far-reaching impact by focusing on representative moments in his
compositional career and critical reception. In this series of five
interlocking essays, Massey provides an illuminating look at the
formal characteristics of Ades's music, considers his work from the
perspective of a contemporary listener, and places it within the
larger context of developments in twentieth-century British music.
He not only traces the diverse historical forms and traditions that
Ades taps into but also reflects on where he is steering the future
of composition and performance. An analysis of the key transitions
in the artist's critical reception completes this book as the most
comprehensive study of this pivotal figure of contemporary
classical music in the English language to this day.
How one extraordinary pianist, scholar, and editor prepared for
publication important scores by Ives, Copland, and Ruggles, and
reshaped the history of American musical modernism. For over sixty
years, the scholar and pianist John Kirkpatrick tirelessly promoted
and championed the music of American composers. In this book, Drew
Massey explores how Kirkpatrick's career as an editor of music
shaped the musicand legacies of some of the great American
modernists, including Aaron Copland, Ross Lee Finney, Roy Harris,
Hunter Johnson, Charles Ives, Robert Palmer, and Carl Ruggles.
Drawing on oral histories, interviews, and Kirkpatrick's own
extensive archives, Massey carefully reconstructs Kirkpatrick's
collaborations with such luminaries, displaying his editorial
practice and inviting reconsideration of many of the most important
debates in American modernism --for example, the self-fashioning of
young composers during the 1940s, the cherished myth of Ruggles as
a composer in communion with the "timeless," and Ives's status as a
pioneer of modernist techniques. First winner (November 2014) of
ASCAP's Virgil Thomson Award for Outstanding Music Criticism. Drew
Massey is an Assistant Professor of Music at Binghamton University.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
The Creator
John David Washington, Gemma Chan, …
DVD
R312
Discovery Miles 3 120
|