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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Suffolk :Boydell & Brewer,
    UID:
    almahu_9947413063302882
    Format: 1 online resource (x, 256 pages) : , digital, PDF file(s).
    ISBN: 9781782041375 (ebook)
    Content: Words and Notes encourages a new wave of scholarship inspired by the ways writers and musicians of the long nineteenth century themselves approached the relationship between music and words. Contributors to the volume engage in two dialogues: with nineteenth-century conceptions of word-music relations, and with each other. Criss-crossing disciplinary boundaries, the authors of the book's eleven essays address new questions relating to listening, imagining and performing music, the act of critique, and music's links with philosophy and aesthetics. The many points of intersection are elucidated in an editorial introduction and via a reflective afterword. Fiction and poetry, musicography, philosophy, music theory, science and music analysis all feature, as do traditions within English, French and German studies. Wide-ranging material foregrounds musical memory, soundscape and evocation; performer dilemmas over the words in Satie's piano music; the musicality of fictional and non-fictional prose; text-setting and the rights of poet vs. composer; the rich novelistic and critical testimony of audience inattention at the opera; German philosophy's potential contribution to musical listening; and Hoffmann's send-ups of the serious music-lover. Throughout, music - its composition, performance and consumption - emerges as a profoundly physical and social force, even when it is presented as the opposite. PHYLLIS WELIVER is Associate Professor of English, Saint Louis University. KATHARINE ELLIS is Stanley Hugh Badock Professor of Music at the University of Bristol
    Note: Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 02 Oct 2015). , Introduction : Approaches to word-music studies of the long nineteenth century / Phyllis Weliver and Katharine Ellis -- Losing sense, making music : what Erik Satie's music and poetry do for each other / Peter Dayan -- Not listening in Paris : critical and fictional lapses of attention at the opera / Cormac Newark -- New expectations : how to listen to sonata form, 1800-1860 / Jon-Tomas Godin -- The science of musical memory : Vernon Lee and the remembrance of sounds past / Shafquat Towheed -- Musical listening in The mysteries of Udolpho / Noelle Chao -- Katherine Mansfield and nineteenth-century musicality / Delia da Sousa Correa -- E.T.A. Hoffmann beyond the "paradigm shift" : music and irony in the novellas 1815-1819 / Matthew Riley -- Fiction as musical critique : Virginia Woolf, The voyage out and the case of Wagner / Emma Sutton -- Théodore de Banville and the mysteries of song / David Evans -- Performing poetry as music : how composers accept Baudelaire's invitation to song / Helen Abbott -- The girl in the oyster, or, How to quarrel with a poet / Susan Youens -- Wording notes : musical marginalia in the guise of an afterword / Annegret Fauser.
    Additional Edition: Print version: ISBN 9781843838111
    Language: English
    Subjects: Musicology
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    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 2
    UID:
    gbv_162063676X
    Format: xx, 214 Seiten
    ISBN: 9781783270156 , 1783270152
    Content: Accompanied Voices is a unique book: not only is it a highly readable anthology of some of the most memorable and accessible international writing about classical music, and a moving commentary by one set of practising artists on the work of another. There have been several anthologies of 'music poems', but never one which follows the story of western music through from the Renaissance to the twenty-first century. This is in effect a chronological guide to the major composers of the last four hundred years, written in the language which comes closest to music itself - poetry. Readers will find in Accompanied Voices the same pleasure that they might find in simply putting on a CD and listening. Every page brings something to arrest or transport and there is extraordinary diversity of response. Anecdote, epiphany, portrait, meditation... but many of these poets offer intellectual insights too and even critiques - there is far more variety here than any straightforward music essay can manage. These poems move beyond the mere names of composers and their works, reaching for more universal concerns. Major poets represented include Geoffrey Hill, Ted Hughes, Elizabeth Jennings, Michael Longley, Andrew Motion, Peter Porter, Siegfried Sassoon, Jo Shapcott, Anne Stevenson and Charles Tomlinson among a total of nearly a hundred writers. JOHN GREENING is a poet and received a Cholmondeley Award in 2008. He is also a Hawthornden Fellow and a Fellow of the English Association. He has published studies of the Poets of the First World War, Yeats, Hardy, Edward Thomas and Elizabethan Love Poets.
    Note: An anthology of poems about specific composers. The poems address composers from the Renaissance through the present, but they were all written since the advent of commercial recordings. The poems are arranged chronologically by composer. With an introduction and indices
    Language: English
    Subjects: Musicology
    RVK:
    Keywords: Musik ; Lyrik ; Lyrik ; Librettist
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  • 3
    UID:
    almahu_BV045424590
    Format: xviii, 284 Seiten : , Illustrationen, Notenbeispiele.
    ISBN: 978-1-78327-390-4
    Content: This collection explores the idea of music in the salon during the long nineteenth century, both as a socio-cultural phenomenon, and as a source of artistic innovation and exchange. Drawing on a wide range of scholarly approaches, this book uses the idea of the salon as a springboard to examine issues such as gender, religion, biography and performance; to explore the ways in which the salon was represented in different media; and to showcase the heterogeneity of the salon through a selection of case studies. It offers fresh considerations of familiar salons in large cultural centres, as well as insights into lesser-known salons in both Europe and the United States. Bringing together an international group of scholars, the collection underscores the enduring impact of the European musical salon. - ANJA BUNZEL holds a research position at the Czech Academy of Sciences. She gained her PhD in Musicology from Maynooth University and has published on Johanna Kinkel and nineteenth-century salon culture in both English and German. NATASHA LOGES is Head of Postgraduate Programmes at the Royal College of Music, London. Her publications include Brahms in the Home and the Concert Hall (Cambridge, 2014) and Brahms and his Poets (Boydell Press, 2017). She is a pianist, broadcaster and critic. (Klappentext)
    Note: Introduction / Anja Bunzel and Natasha Loges. - Johanna Kinkel's Social Life in Berlin (1836-39): Reflections on Historiographical Sources / Anja Bunzel. - Accidental Aesthetics in the Salon: Amateurism and the Romantic Fragment in the Lied Sketches of Bettina von Arnim / Jennifer Ronyak. - Salon Culture in the Circle of Joseph Joachim, or, Composing Inwardness: C. J. Arnold's "Quartettabend bei Bettina von Arnim" Reconsidered / Katharina Uhde and R. Larry Todd. - Reading, Singing, Becoming: The Mädchenlieder of Paul Heyse and Johannes Brahms / Natasha Loges. - Fridays with Malla: Musical Repertoire in the Swedish Salon of Malla Silfverstolpe / Kirsten Santos Rutschman. - Observing Musical Salon Culture in England c. 1800 through the Lens of the Caricature / Maren Bagge and Clemens Kreutzfeldt. - The Salon Singer as Subject of Satire during the July Monarchy / Mary Anne Garnett. - The Instruments of the Vienna Biedermeier Salon: Diversity in Design, Sound, and Technology / Beatrix Darmstädter. - Offenbach and the Representation of the Salon / Péter Bozó. - Affordances of the Piano: A Cinematic Representation of the Victorian Salon / Harry White. - 'Der Mensch ist zur Geselligkeit geboren': Salon Culture, Night Thoughts, and a Schubert Song / Susan Youens. - Traditions, Preferences and Musical Taste in the Staegemann-Olfers Salon in Nineteenth-Century Berlin / Petra Wilhelmy-Dollinger. - Josephine Lang and the Salon in Southern Germany / Harald Krebs. - Jessie Hillebrand and Musical Life in 1870s Florence / Michael Uhde. - An Invitation to 309 Beacon Street: Clara Kathleen Rogers and her Boston Salon / Katie A. Callam. - "Too Much Playing Four Hands!": Ernst von Dohnányi's European Salon in the United States of the 1950s / Veronika Kusz. - Select Bibliography. - Index
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe ISBN 978-1-78744-534-5
    Language: English
    Subjects: Musicology
    RVK:
    Keywords: Salonmusik ; Soziokultur ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Aufsatzsammlung
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  • 4
    UID:
    almahu_BV044957613
    Format: xix, 405 Seiten : , Illustrationen.
    ISBN: 978-1-78327-285-3
    Series Statement: Aldeburgh studies in music volume 13
    Content: Britten is the most literary British composer of the twentieth century. His relationship to the many and varied texts that he set was deeply committed and sensitive. As a result, both his responses to poetry and his collaborations with his librettists tell us a great deal about his music, and often, about the man himself. This book takes a unique approach to Britten, drawing together well-known Britten experts alongside English, music, modern language and history scholars who bring their own perspective to bear on Britten's work. Chapters examine all aspects of Britten's text setting, from his engagement with a wide variety of poetry to his relationship with his librettists. By approaching Britten's operas and songs through their literature, this book offers fresh insights into his vocal works. KATE KENNEDY is the Weinrebe Research Fellow in Life-writing at Wolfson College, Oxford, where she is an associate of both Music and English Faculties. She is a frequent broadcaster for the BBC and specialises in interdisciplinary biography and has published widely on twentieth century music and literature.
    Note: Introduction / Kate Kennedy -- Britten and his librettists : the composer as auteur / Mervyn Cooke -- Britten, Auden and the 1930s / John Fuller -- James, Britten, Piper and the literary supernatural : the changing "vision of evil" in The turn of the screw and Owen Wingrave / Nick Clark -- "Thought's wildernesses" : the development of Britten's Nocturne from library to score / Kate Kennedy -- "Reading at intervals" : Britten's romantic poetry / Brian Young -- Britten's drops : the lyric into song / Rebekah Scott -- "Without any tune" : the role of the discursive shift in Britten's interpretation of poetry / Vicki P. Stroeher -- Britten and modern tragedy / Adrian Poole -- Settings from boyhood / Lucy Walker -- "Practical jokes" : Britten and Auden's Our hunting fathers revisited / Joanna Bullivant -- Choice and inevitability : the moral economy of Peter Grimes / Philip Ross Bullock -- Sin, death, and love : Britten's Holy sonnets of John Donne / David Fuller -- Britten's Donne meditation / Justin Vickers -- Scenes from Britten's Spring symphony / Philip Rupprecht -- "I have read Billy Budd" : the Forster-Britten reading(s) of Melville / Hanna Rochlitz -- Miles must die : ideological uses of "innocence" in Britten's The turn of the screw / J.P.E. Harper-Scott -- Benjamin Britten and medieval drama at Chester : from Abraham and Isaac to "The Nativity" / Peter Happe -- Ambiguous Venice / John Hopkins
    Language: English
    Subjects: Musicology
    RVK:
    Keywords: 1913-1976 Britten, Benjamin ; Vokalmusik ; Aufsatzsammlung
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  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Heidelberg :Universitätsverlag Winter,
    UID:
    edocfu_9960177766202883
    Format: 1 online resource (372 p.)
    ISBN: 3-8253-7326-6
    Series Statement: American studies, volume 181
    Content: HauptbeschreibungThis volume brings together twenty-one original essays by international scholars from the fields of gender studies, cultural theory, and music studies. Covering a wide range of music genres and theoretical perspectives, the shared concern of all contributions is the underlying concept of gender and sexuality pervading music production and performance as well as its consumption. At the end of the first decade of the new millennium, at a time when once abolished gender boundaries seem to be re-established under the guise of postfeminism, there is a discernible and ren
    Note: Revised versions of papers originally presented at the conference Klang Körper, held in Cologne, Germany in June 2008. , Dichotonies : gender and music : an introduction / Beate Neumeier -- Music and gender : a historical and theoretical dialogue : on a theoretical note. Silencing and silence : femininity and the ambivalence of self-articulation. Silencing voices / Elisabeth Bronfen ; Silent voices / Melanie Unseld ; Feminist and queer approaches to music / Chris Weedon ; Why gender still (as always) matters in music studies / Susan McClary ; Feminism, music theory, time, and embodiment / Fred Maus -- Music and the gendering of sound : on an auditory/vocal/sounding note. From "Heroische Bogenstriche" to "Waldeinsamkeit" : gender and genre in Judith Weir's Heroic strokes of the bow and Blond Eckbert / David Beard ; Thomas Adès and the "narrative agendas" of "absolute music" / Kenneth Gloag ; The "amen" breakbeat as fratriarchal totem / Andrew Whelan ; The twittering machine : Kate Bush's Becoming-bird / Philipp Hofmann -- Music and the gendering of text : on a textual note. Like perfect music unto noble words : gender metaphors and Victorian music poetry / Regular Hohl Trillini ; Gender and sociability within the Schöne Müllerin Liederspiel : the case of Luise Hensel and the gardener songs ; Sexy (no no no) : the cool and the hot in female popular song / Barbara Bradby ; Aiming at a mirror : towards a critique of gangsta masculinity / Leonard Kreuzer -- Music and the gendering of performance : on a performance note. The sex of song : brigitte Fassbänder's Winterreise / Lawrence Kramer ; Haunting the house of gender : Marilyn Manson and Gothic rock / Carmen Birkle ; Arabesk : nomadic tales, oriental beasts, and hybrid looks / Ralph Poole ; Dancing to the jailhouse rock : the pop prison / Dirk Schulz -- Intermedial crossovers of music and gender : music in fiction, drama, film, ritual : on an intermedial note. Effeminate idolatry : the word and the violin of flesh / Sylvia Mieszkowski ; The cultural logic of bad taste : country music, "white trash", and gender politics / Mita Banerjee ; Sound tracks to the frontier : gender, difference and music in the American road movie / Birgitt Däwes ; Contemporary playwrights staging music and gender / Beate Neumeier. , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 3-8253-5701-5
    Language: English
    Subjects: Comparative Studies. Non-European Languages/Literatures , Musicology
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  • 6
    UID:
    almahu_BV025554093
    Format: 317 S.
    Edition: Republ., [Faks. der Ausgabe von 1965]
    ISBN: 978-1904331-48-3 , 1-904331-48-3 , 978-1904331-47-6 , 1-904331-47-5
    Language: English
    Subjects: Musicology , English Studies
    RVK:
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Musik ; Literatur ; Englisch ; Lyrik ; Musik ; Theater
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  • 7
    UID:
    edocfu_9960117357102883
    Format: 1 online resource (x, 256 pages) : , digital, PDF file(s).
    ISBN: 1-58046-869-1
    Series Statement: Eastman Studies in Music, Volume 115
    Content: The psychological dimension of Richard Wagner's operas has long been associated with the ideas of Arthur Schopenhauer, yet Wagner had begun absorbing elements of contemporary psychological thought into his stage works as early as the 1830s, twenty years before he engaged with the philosopher's writings. As Katherine Syer demonstrates, the composer incorporated imagery and metaphors with the potential to infuse his psychologically charged dramas with latent political meaning. His operatic visions convey a sense of urgency intimately bound up with the era's crises and instabilities. In Wagner's Visions, Syer offers a detailed examination of Die Feen, Wagner's least known complete opera, as well as new analytical insights into Der fliegende Holländer, Tannhäuser, Lohengrin, and the four Ring dramas. Her study of the ways Wagner probed the inner experiences of his protagonists explores the impact of neglected yet crucial artistic influences. These include the fables of the eighteenth-century Venetian playwright Carlo Gozzi, the Iphigenia operas of Christoph Willibald Gluck, and the legacy of the martyr Theodor Körner. During the Napoleonic Wars, which raged as Wagner was born, Körner's poetry became the lingua franca of the revolutionary movement to liberate and unify Germany. A Humboldt Fellowship recipient, Syer is Assistant Professor of Musicology and Theatre Department Faculty Affiliate at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
    Note: Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 02 Oct 2015). , To be born in Leipzig in 1813 -- Fairytale madness : Wagner and Gozzi -- Senta the somnambulist -- Opposing worlds : Tannhäuser and Lohengrin -- Hunding's horns, Wotan's storms, Sieglinde's nightmare. , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-322-09463-2
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-58046-482-3
    Language: English
    Subjects: Musicology
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  • 8
    Book
    Book
    UID:
    gbv_419731806
    Content: This is a monograph of Ted Spagna, who bridged the gap between art and science with his pioneering visual studies of human sleep behaviour. In 1975, Ted Spagna began his voyeuristic investigation of the hidden landscape of sleep and dreams by photographing people with a time-lapse camera as they slept. Spanga's work is important for both its aesthetic and scientific implications. His images provided researchers with never before seen visual information about sleeping subjects, thus confirming and amplifying scientific studies about sleep behaviour.--
    Content: "Amelia Rosselli is one of the great poets of postwar Italy, and recognized as such throughout Europe. She was also a musician and musicologist, close to John Cage and Karlheinz Stockhausen, and she waged a lifelong battle against depression. The child of Carlo Rosselli, a major figure in the resistance to Mussolini who was assassinated with his brother Nello in 1937, Rosselli grew up in exile and went to high school in Scarsdale, making her fluent in English. English poetry, especially the lyrics and sonnets of Shakespeare and the Elizabethans, became a prime reference for her own poetry, which mingles formal experimentation with memories of traditional forms to evoke the struggles of an embattled conscience. Rosselli's English poems, some of which were published by John Ashbery in the 1960s, are a major part of her body of work and are invariably included in Italian editions of her collected works.Sleep, the title under which Rosselli herself gathered these poems, is the first publication of her haunting and utterly original English oeuvre by an English publisher"--
    Language: German
    Subjects: Musicology
    RVK:
    Keywords: Schlaf ; Schlafverhalten ; Ratgeber
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