MTU Cork Library Catalogue

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Composition, performance, reception : studies in the creative process in music / edited by Wyndham Thomas.

Contributor(s): Thomas, Wyndham.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Aldershot, Hants, England : Ashgate, 1998Description: xx, 174 p. : ill., music ; 25 cm. + hbk.ISBN: 185928325X.Subject(s): Music -- Psychological aspects | Creation (Literary, artistic, etc.)DDC classification: 781.1
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
General Lending MTU Cork School of Music Library Lending 781.1 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 00101139
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Composers, performers, listeners, critics and theorists all play vital roles in the creation of music culture; yet often each group can appear to hold widely divergent views of a musical work's aims and effects. As the title indicates, this book examines the parts played by these groups and the interaction between them. In the first of eleven essays, Robert Saxton discusses the difficulty in pin-pointing the moment of inspiration for a new composition; while Raymond Warren looks at the problems facing operatic performers, including those that arise when interpretations are suggested by the libretto but not in the music. The changing perception of the composer's art from the 14th century to the present day is charted by Wyndham Thomas, in particular attitudes towards arrangement. Two quite different views of the performer's responsibility in communicating the composer's intentions are taken by Charles Rosen and Susan Bradshaw, the latter arguing for the need to bridge the gap between theoretical and practical analysis of a work; and in two fascinating case studies, Eric Clarke and Jennifer Davidson highlight the ways in which attention to movements of the body in performance can reveal aspects of musical structure. The reception of music is tackled from a variety of perspectives in the book. In his assessment of audience reaction to Jonathan Harvey's 'The Riot', Adrian Beaumont concludes that our response is influenced by a complex web of expectations and previous musical experience. The influence of record sleeves in also determining a listener's response to music is discussed by Nicholas Cook; while Stephen Walsh and Adrian Thomas explore two milieux of critical reception - the first to the music of Stravinsky, and the second to works composed during the social-realist period in Poland. On a more personal level, Bojan Bujic's essay forms a fitting counterpart to Saxton's in his attempt to locate the ways in which we experience a new musica

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Table of contents provided by Syndetics

  • Acknowledgements (p. vii)
  • List of examples and illustrations (p. ix)
  • Notes on contributors (p. xi)
  • Preface (p. xv)
  • Introduction (p. xvii)
  • 1 The Process of Composition from Detection to Confection (p. 1)
  • 2 The Composer and Opera Performance (p. 17)
  • 3 Composing, Arranging and Editing: A Historial Survey (p. 35)
  • 4 A Performer's Responsibility (p. 53)
  • 5 Freedom of Interpretation in Twentieth-century Music (p. 66)
  • 6 The Body in Performance (p. 74)
  • 7 Expectation and Interpretation in the Reception of New Music: A Case Study (p. 93)
  • 8 The Domestic Gesamtkunstwerk, or Record Sleeves and Reception (p. 105)
  • 9 Form and Forming: From Victorian Aesthetics to the Mid-twentieth-century Avant-garde (p. 118)
  • 10 Stravinsky and the Vicious Circle: Some Remarks about the Composer and the Press (p. 132)
  • 11 Mobilising our Man: Politics and Music in Poland during the Decade after the Second World War (p. 145)
  • Index of names and titles (p. 169)

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