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The essays in Ives Studies are concerned with Charles Ives (1874SH1954), an American composer of symphonic, choral, and chamber music who was an early pioneer of twentieth-century musical modernism. Ten leading scholars address issues that have been at the forefront of a recent surge in Ives scholarship, including the hotly debated chronology of his work, the nature of his compositional philosophy and style, and his place in music history.
In fourteen years of collaboration, composer Jerry Bock and
lyricist Sheldon Harnick wrote seven of Broadway's most beloved and
memorable musicals together, most famously Fiddler on the Roof
(1964), but also the enduring audience favorite She Loves Me
(1963), and the Pulitzer-Prize-winning Fiorello (1959). With their
charm, humor, and boundless musical invention, their musicals have
won eighteen Tony Awards and continue to capture the imaginations
of millions around the world.
To Broadway, To Life : The Musical Theater of Bock and Harnick is
the first complete book about these creative figures, one of
Broadway's most important songwriting teams. Drawing from extensive
archival sources, and from personal interviews and communications
with Bock and Harnick themselves and their most important
collaborators, author Philip Lambert explores the essence of a
Bock-Harnick show-how it is put together, and what makes it work.
The book includes discussion of songs such as "Sunrise, Sunset" and
"If I Were a Rich Man" that have long been favorites in the public
consciousness, and it also explores a vast catalogue of
lesser-known songs from their many other shows and works, including
a musical puppet show on Broadway, music for the 1964 World's Fair,
and a made-for-television musical. Here too is the first look at
the little-known youthful professional beginnings of Bock and
Harnick in revues and television shows and summer retreats in the
1950s, and the careers they have forged for themselves with new
collaborators in the decades since their partnership dissolved in
1970.
The musicals of Bock and Harnick came at a transitional time in
Broadway history, when the traditions of Rodgers and Hammerstein
were starting to give way to the concept musical, the rock musical,
and eventually the mega-musical. To Broadway, To Life combines
exhaustive research, close musical investigation, and interpretive
critical analysis to place Bock and Harnick in the context of these
times, and helps establish their place in the history of the
American musical theater.
Ives Studies is a collection of essays on the life and music of
American composer Charles Ives (1874-1954). In it, scholars address
significant issues in Ives scholarship, including the hotly debated
chronology of his work, the nature of his compositional philosophy
and style, and his place in music history. The essays take their
place in an Ives literature that understands and demythologizes a
most complex man, and that has brought enlightenments to a
stunningly original body of music.
In fourteen years of collaboration, composer Jerry Bock and
lyricist Sheldon Harnick wrote seven of Broadway's most beloved and
memorable musicals together, most famously Fiddler on the Roof
(1964), but also the enduring audience favorite She Loves Me
(1963), and the Pulitzer Prize-winning Fiorello! (1959). With their
charm, humor, and boundless musical invention, their musicals have
won eighteen Tony Awards and continue to capture the imaginations
of millions around the world. To Broadway, To Life!: The Musical
Theater of Bock and Harnick is the first complete book about these
creative figures, one of Broadway's most important songwriting
teams. Drawing from extensive archival sources, and from personal
interviews and communications with Bock and Harnick themselves and
their most important collaborators, author Philip Lambert explores
the essence of a Bock-Harnick show: how it is put together, and
what makes it work. The book includes discussion of songs such as
"Sunrise, Sunset" and "If I Were a Rich Man" that have long been
favorites in the public consciousness, and it also explores a vast
catalogue of lesser-known songs from their many other shows and
works, including a musical puppet show on Broadway, music for the
1964 World's Fair, and a made-for-television musical. Here too is
the first look at the little-known youthful professional beginnings
of Bock and Harnick in revues and television shows and summer
retreats in the 1950s, and the careers they have forged for
themselves with new collaborators in the decades since their
partnership dissolved in 1970. The musicals of Bock and Harnick
came at a transitional time in Broadway history, when the
traditions of Rodgers and Hammerstein were starting to give way to
the concept musical, the rock musical, and eventually the
mega-musical. To Broadway, To Life! combines exhaustive research,
close musical investigation, and interpretive critical analysis to
place Bock and Harnick in the context of these times, and helps
establish their place in the history of the American musical
theater.
Inside the Music of Brian Wilson is, as author Phillip Lambert
writes in the prologue completely, and intensely, focused on the
music of Brian Wilson, on the musical essence of his songs and the
aesthetic value of his artistic achievements. It acknowledges the
familiar biographical contexts of his songs, but it tells
completely new stories about the birth and evolution of his musical
ideas, identifying important musical trends in his work, heretofore
undisclosed inter-song connections within his music, or between his
music and that of others, and the nature and extent of his
artistry. It aims not just to identify great songs, but to explain
exactly what makes them so.Lambert, a renowned musicologist, brings
to this work to life with both his professional expertise and an
infectious personal appreciation of the power of pop music. His
clear, engaging tone and accessible writing style allows even a
musically inexperienced reader to follow him as he traces Wilsons
musical evolution, with a particular focus on the years leading up
to the writing and recording of Pet Sounds and SMiLE, albums which
many consider to be the masterpieces of his oeuvre. Inside the
Music of Brian Wilson is the definitive book on Wilsons music and
is essential reading for fans of Brian Wilson, the Beach Boys, and
great pop music.Includes THREE amazing Appendixes:Appendix 1: Brian
Wilson Song Chronology*Appendix 2: Four Freshmen Albums, 19551961
Appendix 3: Favorite Songs and Influences Through 1961*The most
complete song chronology ever published.
With this innovative analysis of the music of Charles Ives, Philip
Lambert fills a significant gap in the literature on one of
America's most important composers. Lambert offers the first
large-scale theoretical study of Ives's repertoire, encompassing
major works in all genres. He argues that systematic techniques
governed Ives's compositional language and thinking about music,
even in his unconventional and apparently unstructured pieces. He
portrays Ives as a composer of great diversity and complexity who
nevertheless held to a single artistic vision. Using modes of
analysis for post-tonal music and approaches devised specifically
for the study of Ives as well, the author explains the origin,
evolution, and culmination of Ives's systematic methods. He
discusses important aspects of the composer's early training, the
relation between Ives's experimental and his concert music, Ives's
fugal and canonic techniques as the basis for his systematic music,
his paradigms of procedure and transformation, and pitch relations
in Ives's music, particularly the unfinished Universe Symphony.
Lambert refutes the popular image of Ives as a highly eccentric
composer haphazardly casting about for arbitrarily regulated ways
of generating musical material and instead portrays him as a keenly
determined and resourceful artist who gradually discovered ever
more powerful tools for creating remarkably original music.
The music of Alec Wilder (1907-1980) blends several American
musical traditions, such as jazz and the American popular song,
with classical European forms and techniques. Stylish and
accessible, Wilder's musical oeuvre ranged from sonatas, suites,
concertos, operas, ballets, and art songs to woodwind quintets,
brass quintets, jazz suites, and hundreds of popular songs. In this
biography and critical investigation of Wilder's music, Philip
Lambert chronicles Wilder's early work as a part-time student at
the Eastman School of Music, his ascent through the ranks of the
commercial recording industry in New York City in the 1930s and
1940s, his turn toward concert music from the 1950s onward, and his
devotion late in his life to the study of American popular songs of
the first half of the twentieth century. The book discusses some of
his best-known music, such as the revolutionary octets and songs
such as "I'll Be Around," "While We're Young," and "Blackberry
Winter," and explains the unique blend of cultivated and vernacular
traditions in his singular musical language.
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