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Contributions by Christina Baade, Candace Bailey, Paula J. Bishop,
Maribeth Clark, Brittany Greening, Tammy Kernodle, Kendra Preston
Leonard, April L. Prince, Travis D. Stimeling, and Kristen M.
Turner For every star, there are hundreds of less-recognized women
who contribute to musical communities, influencing their aesthetics
and expanding opportunities available to women. Hidden Harmonies:
Women and Music in Popular Entertainment focuses not on those whose
names are best known nor most celebrated but on the women who had
power in collective or subversive ways hidden from standard
histories. Contributors to Hidden Harmonies reexamine primary
sources using feminist and queer methodologies as well as critical
race theory in order to overcome previous, biased readings. The
scholarship that results from such reexaminations explores topics
from songwriters to the music of the civil rights movement and from
whistling schools to musical influencers. These wide-ranging essays
create a diverse and novel view of women's contribution to music
and its production. With intelligence and care, Hidden Harmonies
uncovers the fascinating figures behind decades of popular music.
The Art Songs of Louise Talma presents some of Talma's finest
compositions and those most frequently performed during her life.
It includes pieces appropriate for beginning, intermediate, and
advanced singers and collaborative pianists. The songs include text
settings of American, English, and French poets and writers,
including Native American poems, works by W. H. Auden, Elizabeth
Barrett Browning, Emily Dickinson, e. e. cummings, John Donne,
Gerald Manley Hopkins, William Shakespeare, and Wallace Stevens, as
well as poems from medieval France and religious texts. Because of
the popularity of Talma's choral works and the fact that her works
for voice and piano were performed often, this sourcebook will be
useful to singers at all stages of their careers, as well as
scholars of twentieth-century music as a whole. The diversity of
compositional approaches Talma used provides a snapshot of American
trends in composition during the twentieth century; during the
course of her career, Talma moved from neo-classicism to serialism
and finally to non-strict serial-derived atonality in her works.
Inclusion of performance and reception histories of the songs helps
trace changing public taste in American art song and the repertoire
of performers, particularly those interested in contemporary music.
When writer and director Joss Whedon created the character Buffy
the Vampire Slayer, he could hardly have expected the resulting
academic interest in his work. Yet almost six years after the end
of Buffy on television, Buffy studies and academic work on Whedon's
expanding oeuvre continue to grow. Now with three hugely popular
television shows, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel, and Firefly, and
the film Serenity all available on DVD, scholars are evaluating
countless aspects of the Whedon universe (or "Whedonverse"). Buffy,
Ballads, and Bad Guys Who Sing: Music in the Worlds of Joss Whedon
studies the significant role that music plays in these works, from
Buffy the Vampire Slayer to the internet musical Dr. Horrible's
Sing-Along Blog. Kendra Preston Leonard has collected a varying
selection of essays that explore music and sound in Joss Whedon's
works. The essays investigate both diegetic and non-diegetic music,
considering music from various sources, including the shows'
original scores, music performed by the characters themselves, and
music contributed by such artists as Michelle Branch, The Sex
Pistols, and Sarah McLachlan, as well as classical composers like
Camille Saint-Saens and Johannes Brahms. The approaches incorporate
historical and theoretical musicology, feminist and queer
musicology, media studies, cultural history, and interdisciplinary
readings. The book also explores the compositions written by Whedon
himself: the theme music for Firefly, and two fully integrated
musicals, the Buffy episode "Once More, With Feeling" and Dr.
Horrible's Sing-Along Blog. With several musical examples, a table
with a full breakdown of the Danse Macabre scene from the acclaimed
Buffy episode "Hush," and an index, this volume will be fascinating
to students and scholars of science-fiction, television, film, and
popular culture.
American composer Louise Talma (1906-1996) was the first female
winner of two back-to-back Guggenheim Awards (1946, 1947), the
first American woman to have an opera premiered in Europe (1962),
the first female winner of the Sibelius Award for Composition
(1963), and the first woman composer elected to the American
Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters (1974). This book
analyses Talma's works in the context of her life, focusing on the
effects on her work of two major changes she made during her adult
life: her conversion to Catholicism as an adult, under the guidance
of Nadia Boulanger, and her adoption of serial compositional
techniques. Employing approaches from traditional musical analysis,
feminist and queer musicology, and women's autobiographical theory
to examine Talma's body of works, comprising some eighty pieces,
this is the first full-length study of this pioneering composer.
Exploring Talma's compositional language, text-setting practices,
and the incorporation of autobiographical elements into her works
using her own letters, sketches, and scores, as well as a number of
other relevant documents, this book positions Talma's contributions
to serial and atonal music in the United States, considers her role
as a woman composer during the twentieth century, and evaluates the
legacy of her works and career in American music.
Shakespeare's three political tragedies Hamlet, Macbeth, and King
Lear have numerously been presented or adapted on film. These three
plays all involve the recurring trope of madness, which, as
constructed by Shakespeare, provided a wider canvas on which to
detail those materials that could not be otherwise expressed:
sexual desire and expectation, political unrest, and, ultimately,
truth, as excavated by characters so afflicted. Music has long been
associated with madness, and was often used as an audible symptom
of a victim's disassociation from their surroundings and societal
rules, as well as their loss of self-control. In Shakespeare,
Madness, and Music: Scoring Insanity in Cinematic Adaptations,
Kendra Preston Leonard examines the use of music in Hamlet,
Macbeth, and King Lear. Whether discussing contemporary source
materials, such as songs, verses, or rhymes specified by
Shakespeare in his plays, or music composed specifically for a film
and original to the director's or composer's interpretations,
Leonard shows how the changing social and scholarly attitudes
towards the plays, their characters, and the conditions that fall
under the general catch-all of "madness" have led to a wide range
of musical accompaniments, signifiers, and incarnations of the
afflictions displayed by Shakespeare's characters. Focusing on the
most widely distributed and viewed adaptations of these plays for
the cinema, each chapter presents the musical treatment of
individual Shakespearean characters afflicted with or feigning
madness: Hamlet, Ophelia, Lady Macbeth, King Lear, and Edgar. The
book offers analysis and interpretation of the music used to
underscore, belie, or otherwise inform or invoke the characters'
states of mind, providing a fascinating indication of culture and
society, as well as the thoughts and ideas of individual directors,
composers, and actors. A bibliography, index, and appendix listing
Shakespeare's film adaptations help complete this fascinating
volume.
Re-Locating the Sounds of the Western examines the use and function
of musical tropes and gestures traditionally associated with the
American Western in new and different contexts ranging from
Elizabethan theater, contemporary drama, space opera and science
fiction, Cold War era European filmmaking, and advertising. Each
chapter focuses on a notable use of Western musical tropes,
textures, instrumentation, form, and harmonic language, delving
into the resonance of the music of the Western to cite bravura,
machismo, colonisation, violence, gender roles and essentialism,
exploration, and other concepts.
The Art Songs of Louise Talma presents some of Talma's finest
compositions and those most frequently performed during her life.
It includes pieces appropriate for beginning, intermediate, and
advanced singers and collaborative pianists. The songs include text
settings of American, English, and French poets and writers,
including Native American poems, works by W. H. Auden, Elizabeth
Barrett Browning, Emily Dickinson, e. e. cummings, John Donne,
Gerald Manley Hopkins, William Shakespeare, and Wallace Stevens, as
well as poems from medieval France and religious texts. Because of
the popularity of Talma's choral works and the fact that her works
for voice and piano were performed often, this sourcebook will be
useful to singers at all stages of their careers, as well as
scholars of twentieth-century music as a whole. The diversity of
compositional approaches Talma used provides a snapshot of American
trends in composition during the twentieth century; during the
course of her career, Talma moved from neo-classicism to serialism
and finally to non-strict serial-derived atonality in her works.
Inclusion of performance and reception histories of the songs helps
trace changing public taste in American art song and the repertoire
of performers, particularly those interested in contemporary music.
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Protectress (Paperback)
Kendra Preston Leonard
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R404
R360
Discovery Miles 3 600
Save R44 (11%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Contributions by Christina Baade, Candace Bailey, Paula J. Bishop,
Maribeth Clark, Brittany Greening, Tammy Kernodle, Kendra Preston
Leonard, April L. Prince, Travis D. Stimeling, and Kristen M.
Turner For every star, there are hundreds of less-recognized women
who contribute to musical communities, influencing their aesthetics
and expanding opportunities available to women. Hidden Harmonies:
Women and Music in Popular Entertainment focuses not on those whose
names are best known nor most celebrated but on the women who had
power in collective or subversive ways hidden from standard
histories. Contributors to Hidden Harmonies reexamine primary
sources using feminist and queer methodologies as well as critical
race theory in order to overcome previous, biased readings. The
scholarship that results from such reexaminations explores topics
from songwriters to the music of the civil rights movement and from
whistling schools to musical influencers. These wide-ranging essays
create a diverse and novel view of women's contribution to music
and its production. With intelligence and care, Hidden Harmonies
uncovers the fascinating figures behind decades of popular music.
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