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Previously unseen letters, documents and photographs trace the life
and artistic evolution of Elliott Carter, and capture his
friendships with fellow musicians and others. Born in New York in
December 1908, the venerable but still active American composer
Elliott Carter is one of the most highly regarded figures in the
music of our time. His works span more than seven decades and have
been the subject of many analyses, and most of his writings have
appeared in carefully edited collections. In contrast, few of the
documents on his life and music, largely preserved at the Paul
Sacher Foundation in Basel, are known to the public. This body of
material forms the main source of the present volume, which offers
a richly annotated selection of Carter's correspondence and other
documents, including unpublished writings, facsimiles of music
manuscripts, and photographs. The book traces the biographical,
intellectual, and artistic evolution of a composer who, building on
American modernism and interacting with the latest developments in
Europe, has forged a distinctive, highly sophisticated musical
language, and captures his friendships with fellow musicians and
friends such as Charles Ives, Nadia Boulanger, John Kirkpatrick,
Aaron Copland, Nicolas Nabokov, and more recently, Pierre Boulez,
Oliver Knussen, Heinz Holliger, Daniel Barenboim, and James Levine.
Published in association with the Paul Sacher Foundation.
This book accompanies the Paul Sacher Foundation's exhibition at
the Bonn Beethovenhaus. In the twentieth and twenty-first
centuries, composers have referred to Beethoven in their music. The
volume explores this subject and illustrates it with documents from
the Foundation's archives in Basel. Although the notion of a
musical "mainstream" with Beethoven as its fons et origo barely
holds today, countless composers of the twentieth and twenty-first
centuries have referred to Beethoven in their music or creatively
sought to distance themselves from him. This volume illustrates his
ongoing relevance using documents from the collections of the Paul
Sacher Foundation. Designed to accompany the eponymous exhibition
in the Bonn Beethovenhaus, itadopts the four thematic areas of that
exhibition: "Learning and Teaching with Beethoven,"
"Idealizations," "Strategies of Reference," and "Distortion -
Dismantlement." It explores the contexts, techniques, and
ideological thrustsof Beethoven references in musicians of very
wide-ranging backgrounds, from Anton Webern, Béla Bartók, and
Richard Strauss to Mauricio Kagel, Cathy Berberian, and Kaija
Saariaho. The selected documents are captured in photographic
reproduction and accompanied by detailed commentary. Each section
is preceded by an introductory essay discussing general aspects of
recent Beethoven reception. A publication of the Paul Sacher
Foundation
An exploration of how music and musicians have moved between North
America and Europe and the positive exchanges that have resulted.
Throughout the 20th century, exchanges between North America and
Europe were vital to the development of musical life on both sides
of the Atlantic, shifting from a postcolonial imbalance of cultural
power at the opening of the century to an increasing sense of
encounters between equals. There were productive exchanges of all
sorts and in both directions, with ever-shifting dynamics over
time. American musicians studied in Europe; European musicians
visited the U.S. or were driven into exile there, orchestras and
soloists crisscrossed the ocean to give concert tours; music
festivals attracted an international clientele; and printed music,
recordings, journalism, radio, and eventually the internet flowed
freely within a transatlantic circuit. This volume, based on the
papers presented at an international conference held at Harvard
University and the University of Munich (2008/2009), explores how
music and musicians - both Europeans and Americans - have moved
across cultures, creating mutual benefit as well as occasional
misunderstanding. It includes contributions by leading historians,
theorists, and scholars of American studies as well as interviews
with two prominent "transatlantic" composers of today, Betsy Jolas
and Steve Reich. The main chapters of the book are devoted to the
following topics: "Performing National Identity", "Touring onthe
Other Side", "Networks of Pedagogy and Patronage", "Exile and
Emigration", "Wartime Concerns", "Cultural Politics on the Cold
War", "Technological Intersections", "Institutional Havens and
Confrontations", "Musical Languages:Concergences and Divergences",
"Questioning Hierarchies, Challenging Boundaries". This volume has
been edited by Felix Meyer, Carol J. Oja, Wolfgang Rathert and Anne
C. Shreffler.
This is an EXACT reproduction of a book published before 1923. This
IS NOT an OCR'd book with strange characters, introduced
typographical errors, and jumbled words. This book may have
occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages, poor
pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the original
artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We believe
this work is culturally important, and despite the imperfections,
have elected to bring it back into print as part of our continuing
commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide. We
appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in the
preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
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