Music of the Sirens

Music of the Sirens
Author: Linda Austern
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Total Pages: 440
Release: 2006-07-21
Genre: Music
ISBN: 9780253112071

Whether referred to as mermaid, usalka, mami wata, or by some other name, and whether considered an imaginary being or merely a person with extraordinary abilities, the siren is the remarkable creature that has inspired music and its representations from ancient Greece to present-day Africa and Latin America. This book, co-edited by a historical musicologist and an ethnomusicologist, brings together leading scholars and some talented newcomers in classics, music, media studies, literature, and cultural studies to consider the siren and her multifaceted relationships to music across human time and geography.

Listening to the Sirens

Listening to the Sirens
Author: Judith Peraino
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 370
Release: 2006
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0520215877

Judith Perraino investigates how music has been used throughout history to call into question norms of gender and sexuality. Beginning with an examination of the mythology surrounding the Sirens, she goes on to consider musical creatures, gods, humans and music-addled listeners.

Songs from the Deep

Songs from the Deep
Author: Kelly Powell
Publisher: Margaret K. McElderry Books
Total Pages: 320
Release: 2020-10-27
Genre: Young Adult Fiction
ISBN: 1534438092

A girl searches for a killer on an island where deadly sirens lurk just beneath the waves in this “twisty, atmospheric story that grips readers like a siren song” (Publishers Weekly, starred review). The sea holds many secrets. Moira Alexander has always been fascinated by the deadly sirens who lurk along the shores of her island town. Even though their haunting songs can lure anyone to a swift and watery grave, she gets as close to them as she can, playing her violin on the edge of the enchanted sea. When a young boy is found dead on the beach, the islanders assume that he’s one of the sirens’ victims. Moira isn’t so sure. Certain that someone has framed the boy’s death as a siren attack, Moira convinces her childhood friend, the lighthouse keeper Jude Osric, to help her find the real killer, rekindling their friendship in the process. With townspeople itching to hunt the sirens down, and their own secrets threatening to unravel their fragile new alliance, Moira and Jude must race against time to stop the killer before it’s too late—for humans and sirens alike.

Celestial Sirens

Celestial Sirens
Author: Robert L. Kendrick
Publisher: Clarendon Press
Total Pages: 582
Release: 1996-05-23
Genre: Music
ISBN: 0191584509

This study investigates an almost unknown musical culture: that of cloistered nuns in one of the major cities of early modern Europe. These women were the most famous musicians of Milan, and the music composed for them opens up a hitherto unstudied musical repertory, which allows insight into the symbolic world of the city. Even more importantly, the music actually composed by four such nuns, Claudia Scossa, Claudia Rusca, Chiara Margarita Cozzollani, and Rosa Giacinta Badalla - reveals the musical expression of women's devotional life. The two centuries' worth of battles over nuns' singing of polyphony, studies here for the first time on the basis of massive archival documentation, also suggest that the implementation of reform in the major centre of post-Tridentine Catholic renewal was far more varied; incomplete, subject to local political pressure and individual interpretation, and short-lived than any religious historian has ever suggested. Other factors that marked nuns' musical lives and creative output - liturgical traditions of the religious orders, the problems of performance practice attendant upon all-female singing ensembles - are here addressed for the first time in the musicological literature.

All Day I Dream About Sirens

All Day I Dream About Sirens
Author: Domenica Martinello
Publisher: Coach House Books
Total Pages: 106
Release: 2019-04-10
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1770565892

What started as a small sequence of poems about the Starbucks logo grew to monstrous proportions after the poet fell under a siren spell herself. All Day I Dream About Sirens is both an ancient reverie and a screen-induced stupor as these poems reckon with the enduring cultural fascination with siren and mermaid narratives as they span geographies, economies, and generations, chronicling and reconfiguring the male-centered epic and women’s bodies and subjectivities.

Siren Songs

Siren Songs
Author: Mary Ann Smart
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 310
Release: 2014-12-25
Genre: Music
ISBN: 1400866715

It has long been argued that opera is all about sex. Siren Songs is the first collection of articles devoted to exploring the impact of this sexual obsession, and of the power relations that come with it, on the music, words, and staging of opera. Here a distinguished and diverse group of musicologists, literary critics, and feminist scholars address a wide range of fascinating topics--from Salome's striptease to hysteria to jazz and gender--in Italian, English, German, and French operas from the eighteenth to the twentieth centuries. The authors combine readings of specific scenes with efforts to situate these musical moments within richly and precisely observed historical contexts. Challenging both formalist categories of musical analysis and the rhetoric that traditionally pits a male composer against the female characters he creates, many of the articles work toward inventing a language for the study of gender and opera. The collection opens with Mary Ann Smart's introduction, which provides an engaging reflection on the state of gender topics in operatic criticism and musicology. It then moves on to a foundational essay on the complex relationships between opera and history by the renowned philosopher and novelist Catherine Clément, a pioneer of feminist opera criticism. Other articles examine the evolution of the "trouser role" as it evolved in the lesbian subculture of fin-de-siècle Paris, the phenomenon of opera seria's "absent mother" as a manifestation of attitudes to the family under absolutism, the invention of a "hystericized voice" in Verdi's Don Carlos, and a collaborative discussion of the staging problems posed by the gender politics of Mozart's operas. The contributors are Wye Jamison Allanboork, Joseph Auner, Katherine Bergeron, Philip Brett, Peter Brooks, Catherine Clement, Martha Feldman, Heather Hadlock, Mary Hunter, Linda Hutcheon and Michael Hutcheon, M.D., Lawrence Kramer, Roger Parker, Mary Ann Smart, and Gretchen Wheelock.

The Sirens

The Sirens
Author: Bernard Evslin
Publisher: Chelsea House Publications
Total Pages: 104
Release: 1988
Genre: Body, Mind & Spirit
ISBN: 9781555462581

Describes the origins of the sirens, half-women, half-birds, who lured sailors to their deaths with their irresistible voices, and relates their encounter with Ulysses.

Sirens

Sirens
Author: Toni Oswald
Publisher:
Total Pages: 84
Release: 2020-10-15
Genre:
ISBN: 9780578773940

A girl born a bird becomes a Her. Traversing trauma, ecocide, violence, magic, and the rise of the shattered feminine, Sirens is a wake-up song sung by the daughters of earth. "Is anything lost ever found?" they ask the collective we. After falling through space, a girl is born part bird who becomes a Her. Her floats and flies-spins the loom of women's work-baking blue pies, hopping trains, and working as a call girl. Through the tapestries of surrealistic landscapes, mystical mantras, and shadowed logos, the story of Her is the story of us, and the emergency of the feminine's urgent cry to wake up. Mixing "one part madness, one part genius, blood and sulphur," Sirens is a feminist manifesto for dark times, warning us that only love will carry us over and beyond life's most difficult verbs.