Harmony

Harmony
Author: Walter Piston
Publisher:
Total Pages: 594
Release: 1978
Genre: Harmony
ISBN: 9780393090345

This fifth edition of Harmony marks the forty-fifth year of its successful use.

Counterpoint

Counterpoint
Author: Walter Piston
Publisher: W W Norton & Company Incorporated
Total Pages: 235
Release: 1947
Genre: Music
ISBN: 9780393097283

Explores the contrapuntal element in significant works from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries for the music student who fully understands the composition of harmony

Orchestration

Orchestration
Author: Walter Piston
Publisher: W. W. Norton
Total Pages: 477
Release: 1955
Genre: Music
ISBN: 9780393097405

A college-level music text that develops the student's knowledge of musical instruments, and their function in the orchestra

Harvard Composers

Harvard Composers
Author: Howard Pollack
Publisher:
Total Pages: 522
Release: 1992
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN:

Walter Piston (1894-1976) taught for over thirty years (1926-1960) at Harvard, where he taught such well-known composers as Harold Shapiro and Leonard Bernstein. The biographies, major accomplishments, stylistic developments, and technical resources of 33 of his students are described.

Instrumentation and Orchestration

Instrumentation and Orchestration
Author: Alfred Blatter
Publisher: Cengage Learning
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1997
Genre: Arrangement (Music)
ISBN: 9780534251871

The second edition features a new discussion of the bugle, information on percussion instruments of American and African origin, an extensively rewritten section on the organ, and the addition of Spanish terms to the existing English, French, German, and Italian. Appendixes on MIDI, guitar fingering, and guitar chords are new to the second edition, and the material on electronic instruments and electronic sound modification has been revised and expanded. The revision also includes nearly 100 new musical examples.

The American Military Tradition

The American Military Tradition
Author: John Martin Carroll
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 358
Release: 2007
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780742544284

In this completely revised and updated second edition, historians John M. Carroll and Colin F. Baxter have gathered an esteemed group of military historians to explore the pivotal issues and themes in American warfare from the Colonial era to the present conflict in Iraq.

Neoclassical Music in America

Neoclassical Music in America
Author: R. James Tobin
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 301
Release: 2014-07-02
Genre: Music
ISBN: 0810884402

From the 1920s to the 1950s, neoclassicism was one of the dominant movements in American music. Today this music is largely in eclipse, mostly absent in performance and even from accounts of music history, in spite of—and initially because of—its adherence to an expanded tonality. No previous book has focused on the nature and scope of this musical tradition. Neoclassical Music in America: Voices of Clarity and Restraint makes clear what neoclassicism was, how it emerged in America, and what happened to it. Music reviewer and scholar, R. James Tobin argues that efforts to define musical neoclassicism as a style largely fail because of the stylistic diversity of the music that fall within its scope. However, neoclassicists as different from one another as the influential Igor Stravinsky and Paul Hindemith did have a classical aesthetic in common, the basic characteristics of which extend to other neoclassicists This study focuses, in particular, on a group of interrelated neoclassical American composers who came to full maturity in the 1940s. These included Harvard professor Walter Piston, who had studied in France in the 1920s; Harold Shapero, the most traditional of the group; Irving Fine and Arthur Berger, his colleagues at Brandeis; Lukas Foss, later an experimentalist composer whose origins lay in neoclassicism of the 1940s; Alexei Haieff, and Ingolf Dahl, both close associates of Stravinsky; and others. Tobin surveys the careers of these figures, drawing especially on early reviews of performances before offering his own critical assessment of individual works. Adventurous collectors of recordings, performing musicians, concert and broadcasting programmers, as well as music and cultural historians and those interested in musical aesthetics, will find much of interest here. Dates of composition, approximate duration of individual works, and discographies add to the work’s reference value.

The American Symphony

The American Symphony
Author: Neil Butterworth
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 385
Release: 2019-05-23
Genre: Music
ISBN: 0429789440

First published in 1998, this volume is the first book to focus on the American symphony. Neil Butterworth surveys the development of the symphony in the United States from early European influences in the last century to the present day, and asks why American composers have shown such allegiance to a musical form which their European contemporaries appear to have discarded. An overview of the growth of musical societies in America during the eighteenth century and the establishment of the first professional orchestras during the early part of the nineteenth century is followed by chronological analyses of the works of those composers who have played important parts in the progress of symphony in the United States, from Charles Ives, Aaron Copland and Leonard Bernstein, to contemporary figures such as William Bolcom and John Harbison. Complete with a comprehensive catalogue of symphonies and an extensive discography, this book is an indispensable reference work.