Peter Sculthorpe

Peter Sculthorpe
Author: Graeme Skinner
Publisher: NewSouth
Total Pages: 551
Release: 2015-10-01
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1742242162

Peter Sculthorpe, who died in 2014, remains Australia’s best-known composer and is widely held to be the most important creative musical spirit the country has produced. Beautifully written and fastidiously researched, this authorised biography provides an insight into Sculthorpe’s formation years: his quest for personal voice, and his arrival – through many creative friendships and collaborations – at a place in the collective heart of the nation. It charts the realisation of a youthful vocation to become not merely a composer, but an Australian composer. Graeme Skinner’s biography is also a social history, examining Sculthorpe’s unique role in the creation of Australian musical modernism in the 1960s – an important era in Australia’s cultural evolution.

The Norton/Grove Dictionary of Women Composers

The Norton/Grove Dictionary of Women Composers
Author: Julie Anne Sadie
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Total Pages: 604
Release: 1995
Genre: Music
ISBN: 9780393034875

Throughout history women have been composing music, but their achievements have usually gone unrecognized.

The Contemporary Violin

The Contemporary Violin
Author: Patricia Strange
Publisher: Scarecrow Press
Total Pages: 353
Release: 2003-01-21
Genre: Music
ISBN: 1461664101

Written by a composer and a musician, The Contemporary Violin offers a unique menu of avant-garde musical possibilities that both performers and composers will enjoy exploring. Allen and Patricia Strange's comprehensive study critically examines extended performance techniques found in the violin literature of the latter half of the twentieth century. Drawing from both published and private manuscripts, the authors present extended performance options for the acoustic, modified, electric, and MIDI violin, with signal processing and computer-related techniques, and include more than 400 notated examples. The authors begin with bowing techniques and proceed systematically through other aspects of string playing, including MIDI technologies. Their correspondence and research with many performers and composers, the book's extensive score and text bibliography, and the discography of more than 130 recordings make The Contemporary Violin a valuable contemporary music reference and guide. An additional benefit is its listing of Internet resources that will keep the reader up to date with recent developments in contemporary performance and composition. First published by UC Press, 2001.

Shostakovich

Shostakovich
Author: Laurel E. Fay
Publisher:
Total Pages: 494
Release: 2000
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780195182514

For this biography the author has used many primary documents; Shostakovich's many letters, concert programmes, newspaper articles and diaries of his contemporaries. Showing his life as an example of the paradoxes of living as an artist in Russia.

Library of Congress Catalog

Library of Congress Catalog
Author: Library of Congress
Publisher:
Total Pages: 822
Release: 1973
Genre: Audio-visual materials
ISBN:

A cumulative list of works represented by Library of Congress printed cards.

The Cambridge Companion to Michael Tippett

The Cambridge Companion to Michael Tippett
Author: Kenneth Gloag
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 335
Release: 2013-01-17
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1107021979

This Companion provides a wide ranging and accessible study of one of the most individual composers of the twentieth century. A team of international scholars shed new light on Tippett's major works and draw attention to those that have not yet received the attention they deserve.

The Boston Composers Project

The Boston Composers Project
Author: Boston Area Music Libraries
Publisher: MIT Press
Total Pages: 818
Release: 1983
Genre: Music
ISBN: 9780262021982

The bibliography lists nearly 5,000 compositions by 200 composers of jazz and "art" music, indicating where scores or realizations can be purchased, rented, or borrowed, and which Boston area libraries have them in their collections.

Contemporary World Musicians

Contemporary World Musicians
Author: Clifford Thompson
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 3314
Release: 2020-10-07
Genre: Reference
ISBN: 1135939616

Music lovers, researchers, students, librarians, and teachers can trace the personal and artistic influences behind music makers from Elton John to Leontyne Price. Individual entries on over 400 of the world's most renowned and accomplished living performers, composers, conductors, and band leaders in musical genres from opera to hip-hop. Also includes an in-depth Index covering musicians of all eras, so that readers can learn which artists, alive or dead, influenced the work of today's most important figures in the music industry.

The Pro Arte Quartet

The Pro Arte Quartet
Author: John W. Barker
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Total Pages: 368
Release: 2017
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 158046906X

An engaging window into a century of musical life, as seen in the history of the Pro Arte String Quartet, first organized in 1912 and still performing today.

Shostakovich and His World

Shostakovich and His World
Author: Laurel E. Fay
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 428
Release: 2021-06-08
Genre: Music
ISBN: 0691232199

Dmitri Shostakovich (1906-1975) has a reputation as one of the leading composers of the twentieth century. But the story of his controversial role in history is still being told, and his full measure as a musician still being taken. This collection of essays goes far in expanding the traditional purview of Shostakovich's world, exploring the composer's creativity and art in terms of the expectations--historical, cultural, and political--that forged them. The collection contains documents that appear for the first time in English. Letters that young "Miti" wrote to his mother offer a glimpse into his dreams and ambitions at the outset of his career. Shostakovich's answers to a 1927 questionnaire reveal much about his formative tastes in the arts and the way he experienced the creative process. His previously unknown letters to Stalin shed new light on Shostakovich's position within the Soviet artistic elite. The essays delve into neglected aspects of Shostakovich's formidable legacy. Simon Morrison provides an in-depth examination of the choreography, costumes, décor, and music of his ballet The Bolt and Gerard McBurney of the musical references, parodies, and quotations in his operetta Moscow, Cheryomushki. David Fanning looks at Shostakovich's activities as a pedagogue and the mark they left on his students' and his own music. Peter J. Schmelz explores the composer's late-period adoption of twelve-tone writing in the context of the distinctively "Soviet" practice of serialism. Other contributors include Caryl Emerson, Christopher H. Gibbs, Levon Hakobian, Leonid Maximenkov, and Rosa Sadykhova. In a provocative concluding essay, Leon Botstein reflects on the different ways listeners approach the music of Shostakovich.