Concerto in B Minor Op. 61

Concerto in B Minor Op. 61
Author: Edward Elgar
Publisher: Courier Corporation
Total Pages: 99
Release: 2013-01-01
Genre: Music
ISBN: 0486491242

This practice and performance edition of one of the most beloved pieces in the modern violin repertoire contains a piano reduction and a separate violin part.

The New Beethoven

The New Beethoven
Author: Jeremy Yudkin
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Total Pages: 573
Release: 2020
Genre: Music
ISBN: 1580469930

Marking the 250th anniversary of the composer's birth, this volume presents twenty-one completely new essays on aspects of Beethoven's personal life, his composing process, his manuscripts, and his greatest works.

A Theory of Virtual Agency for Western Art Music

A Theory of Virtual Agency for Western Art Music
Author: Robert S. Hatten
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Total Pages: 251
Release: 2018-09-06
Genre: Music
ISBN: 0253038014

In his third volume on musical expressive meaning, Robert S. Hatten examines virtual agency in music from the perspectives of movement, gesture, embodiment, topics, tropes, emotion, narrativity, and performance. Distinguished from the actual agency of composers and performers, whose intentional actions either create music as notated or manifest music as significant sound, virtual agency is inferred from the implied actions of those sounds, as they move and reveal tendencies within music-stylistic contexts. From our most basic attributions of sources for perceived energies in music, to the highest realm of our engagement with musical subjectivity, Hatten explains how virtual agents arose as distinct from actual ones, how unspecified actants can take on characteristics of (virtual) human agents, and how virtual agents assume various actorial roles. Along the way, Hatten demonstrates some of the musical means by which composers and performers from different historical eras have staged and projected various levels of virtual agency, engaging listeners imaginatively and interactively within the expressive realms of their virtual and fictional musical worlds.

The Penguin Companion to Classical Music

The Penguin Companion to Classical Music
Author: Paul Griffiths
Publisher: Penguin UK
Total Pages: 1412
Release: 2004-10-07
Genre: Music
ISBN: 0141909765

This superbly authoratitive new work provides a comprehensive A-Z guide to some 1000 years of Western music. It explores in detail the lives and achievements of a vast range of composers, as well as looking at such key topics as music history (from medieval plainchant to contemporary minimalism), performers, theory and jargon. Throught Griffiths skilfully blends lightly worn scholarship with personal insight, whether examining the emotional colouring that different musical keys achieve or charting the rise and development of the symphony.

The Age of Beethoven, 1790-1830

The Age of Beethoven, 1790-1830
Author: Gerald Abraham
Publisher:
Total Pages: 774
Release: 1982
Genre: Music
ISBN: 9780193163089

Covers forty years which saw profound changes in music, most of them dominated by Beethoven. Provides a detailed, scholarly critical survey of the music of the period with chapters on French, Italian and German opera and on opera in other countries, on Beethoven's orchestral and chamber music and of his contemporaries on the concerto, on piano music, on solo song and on choral music, as well as an introductory chapter on general musical conditions of the time.

The Strad

The Strad
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 724
Release: 1923
Genre: Bowed stringed instruments
ISBN:

Elements of Sonata Theory

Elements of Sonata Theory
Author: James Hepokoski
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 692
Release: 2011-02-11
Genre: Music
ISBN: 0199890234

Elements of Sonata Theory is a comprehensive, richly detailed rethinking of the basic principles of sonata form in the decades around 1800. This foundational study draws upon the joint strengths of current music history and music theory to outline a new, up-to-date paradigm for understanding the compositional choices found in the instrumental works of Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, and their contemporaries: sonatas, chamber music, symphonies, overtures, and concertos. In so doing, it also lays out the indispensable groundwork for anyone wishing to confront the later adaptations and deformations of these basic structures in the nineteenth and earlier twentieth centuries. Combining insightful music analysis, contemporary genre theory, and provocative hermeneutic turns, the book brims over with original ideas, bold and fresh ways of awakening the potential meanings within a familiar musical repertory. Sonata Theory grasps individual compositions-and each of the individual moments within them-as creative dialogues with an implicit conceptual background of flexible, ever-changing historical norms and patterns. These norms may be recreated as constellations "compositional defaults," any of which, however, may be stretched, strained, or overridden altogether for individualized structural or expressive purposes. This book maps out the terrain of that conceptual background, against which what actually happens-or does not happen-in any given piece may be assessed and measured. The Elements guides the reader through the standard (and less-than-standard) formatting possibilities within each compositional space in sonata form, while also emphasizing the fundamental role played by processes of large-scale circularity, or "rotation," in the crucially important ordering of musical modules over an entire movement. The book also illuminates new ways of understanding codas and introductions, of confronting the generating processes of minor-mode sonatas, and of grasping the arcs of multimovement cycles as wholes. Its final chapters provide individual studies of alternative sonata types, including "binary" sonata structures, sonata-rondos, and the "first-movement form" of Mozart's concertos.