Bach: The Goldberg Variations
Title | Bach: The Goldberg Variations PDF eBook |
Author | Peter Williams |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 132 |
Release | 2001-09-27 |
Genre | Music |
ISBN | 9780521001939 |
Many listeners and players are fascinated by Bach's Goldberg Variations. In this wideranging and searching study, Professor Williams, one of the leading Bach scholars of our time, helps them probe its depths and understand its uniqueness. He considers the work's historical origins, especially in relation to all Bach's Clavierübung volumes and late keyboard works, its musical agenda and its formal shape, and discusses significant performance issues. In the course of the book he poses a number of key questions. Why should such a work be written? Does the work have both a conceptual and a perceptual shape? What other music is likely to have influenced the Goldberg and to what extent is it trying to be encyclopedic? What is the canonic vocabulary? How have contemporaries or musicians from Beethoven to the present day seen this work and, above all, how has its mysterious beauty been created?
The Soldier Tir'd
Title | The Soldier Tir'd PDF eBook |
Author | Thomas Augustine Arne |
Publisher | |
Pages | 6 |
Release | 1800 |
Genre | Operas |
ISBN |
Sonata Forms
Title | Sonata Forms PDF eBook |
Author | Charles Rosen |
Publisher | W. W. Norton & Company |
Pages | 438 |
Release | 1988 |
Genre | Music |
ISBN | 9780393302196 |
"Nobody writes better about music .... again and again, unerring insight into just the features that make the music special and fine."--The New York Review of Books
Music in Renaissance Magic
Title | Music in Renaissance Magic PDF eBook |
Author | Gary Tomlinson |
Publisher | University of Chicago Press |
Pages | 318 |
Release | 1993 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9780226807928 |
Magic enjoyed a vigorous revival in sixteenth-century Europe, attaining a prestige lost for over a millennium and becoming, for some, a kind of universal philosophy. Renaissance music also suggested a form of universal knowledge through renewed interest in two ancient themes: the Pythagorean and Platonic "harmony of the celestial spheres" and the legendary effects of the music of bards like Orpheus, Arion, and David. In this climate, Renaissance philosophers drew many new and provocative connections between music and the occult sciences. In Music in Renaissance Magic, Gary Tomlinson describes some of these connections and offers a fresh view of the development of early modern thought in Italy. Raising issues essential to postmodern historiography—issues of cultural distance and our relationship to the others who inhabit our constructions of the past —Tomlinson provides a rich store of ideas for students of early modern culture, for musicologists, and for historians of philosophy, science, and religion. "A scholarly step toward a goal that many composers have aimed for: to rescue the idea of New Age Music—that music can promote spiritual well-being—from the New Ageists who have reduced it to a level of sonic wallpaper."—Kyle Gann, Village Voice "An exemplary piece of musical and intellectual history, of interest to all students of the Renaissance as well as musicologists. . . . The author deserves congratulations for introducing this new approach to the study of Renaissance music."—Peter Burke, NOTES "Gary Tomlinson's Music in Renaissance Magic: Toward a Historiography of Others examines the 'otherness' of magical cosmology. . . . [A] passionate, eloquently melancholy, and important book."—Anne Lake Prescott, Studies in English Literature
Music for Analysis
Title | Music for Analysis PDF eBook |
Author | Thomas Benjamin |
Publisher | |
Pages | 0 |
Release | 2001 |
Genre | Harmonic analysis (Music) |
ISBN |
Leonard Bernstein
Title | Leonard Bernstein PDF eBook |
Author | Barry Seldes |
Publisher | Univ of California Press |
Pages | 310 |
Release | 2009-05-26 |
Genre | Music |
ISBN | 9780520943070 |
From his dazzling conducting debut in 1943 until his death in 1990, Leonard Bernstein's star blazed brilliantly. In this fresh and revealing biography of Bernstein's political life, Barry Seldes examines Bernstein's career against the backdrop of cold war America—blacklisting by the State Department in 1950, voluntary exile from the New York Philharmonic in 1951 for fear that he might be blacklisted, signing a humiliating affidavit to regain his passport—and the factors that by the mid-1950s allowed his triumphant return to the New York Philharmonic. Seldes for the first time links Bernstein's great concert-hall and musical-theatrical achievements and his real and perceived artistic setbacks to his involvement with progressive political causes. Making extensive use of previously untapped FBI files as well as overlooked materials in the Library of Congress's Bernstein archive, Seldes illuminates the ways in which Bernstein's career intersected with the twentieth century's most momentous events. This broadly accessible and impressively documented account of the celebrity-maestro's life deepens our understanding of an entire era as it reveals important and often ignored intersections of American culture and political power.
The Great Art of Knowing
Title | The Great Art of Knowing PDF eBook |
Author | Daniel Stolzenberg |
Publisher | |
Pages | 178 |
Release | 2001 |
Genre | Civilization, Baroque |
ISBN |