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The first detailed narrative of the Composers' Forum, documenting
the vast array of composers, musical styles, ideologies, and
audience responses in New York in the 1930s. The New York
Composers' Forum was a weekly series of new-music concerts
sponsored by the Federal Music Project and Works Progress
Administration. It showcased the music of modern American composers
such as Aaron Copland, Amy Beach, Henry Cowell, and Ruth Crawford
Seeger, and included question-and-answer sessions between the
composers and audiences. These sessions led to discussions,
arguments, and sometimes even riots, all documented in nearly
complete transcripts. This book is the first to tell the story of
the Composers' Forum. Following the fascinating threads of dialogue
from the transcripts, Melissa de Graaf explores the remarkable
diversity of composers and musical styles represented, including
numerous composers who have since been ignored or forgotten. She
also examines the composers' and listeners' attitudes toward
modernism, politics, gender, race, and American identity. In this
important study of a unique and overlooked American institution, de
Graaf shows that "modern" aesthetics in the 1930s comprised far
more diverse styles and thought than we imagine today. Melissa J.
de Graaf is Associate Professor ofMusicology at the University of
Miami.
Interdisciplinary perspectives on the life and work of the esteemed
"ultra-modern" American composer and pioneering folk music
activist, Ruth Crawford Seeger (1901-1953). Ruth Crawford Seeger's
Worlds offers new perspectives on the life and pioneering musical
activities of American composer and folk music activist Ruth
Crawford Seeger (1901-1953). Ruth Crawford developed a unique
modernist style with such now-esteemed works as her String Quartet
1931. In 1933, after marrying Charles Seeger, she turned to the
work of teaching music to children and of transcribing, arranging,
and publishing folk songs. Thiscollection of studies by
musicologists, music theorists, folklorists, historians, music
educators, and women's studies scholars reveals how innovation and
tradition have intertwined in surprising ways to shape the cultural
landscape of twentieth-century America. Contributors: Lyn Ellen
Burkett, Melissa J. De Graaf, Taylor A. Greer, Lydia Hamessley,
Bess Lomax Hawes, Jerrold Hirsch, Roberta Lamb, Carol J. Oja, Nancy
Yunhwa Rao, Joseph N. Straus,Judith Tick. Ray Allen (Brooklyn
College) is author of Singing in the Spirit: African-American
Sacred Quartets in New York City. Ellie M. Hisama (Columbia
University) is author of Gendering Musical Modernism: The Music of
Ruth Crawford Seeger, Marion Bauer, and Miriam Gideon.
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