new book: _Modernism and Music_
pynchonoid
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Mon Mar 22 14:14:12 CST 2004
<http://www.press.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/hfs.cgi/00/15865.ctl>
Albright, Daniel, editor Modernism and Music: An
Anthology of Sources. Edited and with Commentary by
Daniel Albright. 440 p. (est.), 19 halftones. 6_5/8 x
9_3/8 2003
If in earlier eras music may have seemed slow to
respond to advances in other artistic media, during
the modernist age it asserted itself in the vanguard.
Works such as Stravisky's The Rite of Spring indeed
became chief engines for the modernization of the
arts. Modernism and Music provides a rich quarry of
texts on this movement, some translated into English
for the first time. It offers not only important
statements by composers and critics, but also musical
speculations by poets, novelists, philosophers, and
others--all of which combine with Daniel Albright's
extensive, interlinked commentary to place modernist
music in the full context of intellectual and cultural
history. [...]
Table of Contents
1. Introduction
Arnold Schoenberg, "The Future of the Opera" (1927)
Sergei Prokofiev, from From My Life (1944)
2. Testing the Boundaries between Speech and Music
Harry Partch, from Genesis of a Music (1949)
Arnold Schoenberg, Foreword to Pierrot Lunaire (1912)
Arnold Schoenberg, "The Relationship to the Text"
(1912)
Alban Berg, "Voice in Opera" (1929)
James Joyce, "Sirens" (1922)
Virginia Woolf, from The Waves (1931)
T. S. Eliot, "The Music of Poetry" (1942)
Carl Nielsen, from "Words, Music, and Program Music"
(1925)
Paul Hindemith, from A Composer's World (1949-50)
3. Testing the Boundaries between the Visual Arts and
Music
Painting and Architecture
Arnold Schoenberg, from Harmonielehre (1911)
George Antheil, Letter to Nicolas Slonimsky (1936)
George Antheil, "Composer's Notes on 1952-53
Re-Editing" [of Ballet Mécanique] (1953)
Theodor Adorno, from Philosophy of Modern Music (1948)
Morton Feldman, [Time-canvas] (1983)
Iannis Xenakis, from Formalized Music (1971)
Embodying Physical Movement: Ballet and Film
Émile Jaques-Dalcroze, "The Technique of Moving
Plastic" (1922)
Hanns Eisler, from Composing for the Films (1947)
4. The New Music Theater
Friedrich Nietzsche, from The Birth of Tragedy (1872)
Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Letter to Richard Strauss
(1911)
Kurt Weill, "Shifts in Musical Composition" (1927)
Kurt Weill, "Opera--Where To?" (1929)
Alban Berg, "The 'Problem of Opera'" (1928)
Ernst Krenek, from "Is Opera Still Possible Today?"
(1936)
W. H. Auden, from "The World of Opera" (1967)
5. Fuller Universes of Music
Abolishing the Old Rules
Claude Debussy, Monsieur Croche antidilettante (1901)
Ferruccio Busoni, from Sketch of a New Esthetic of
Music (1907)
Max Reger, "Degeneration and Regeneration in Music"
(1907)
Charles Ives, from Essays before a Sonata (1920)
Charles Ives, "Postface to 114 Songs" (1922)
Charles Ives, "Music and Its Future" (1929)
Percy Grainger, "Free Music" (1938)
Pantonality
Arnold Schoenberg and Vassily Kandinsky,
Correspondence (1911)
Noise
Luigi Russolo, "The Art of Noises: Futurist Manifesto"
(1913)
Edgard Varèse, "Music and the Times" (1936)
John Cage, Fragments from Silence (1961)
6. New Discipline: The Twelve-Tone Method
Arnold Schoenberg, from "Composition with Twelve
Tones": fiat lux (1941)
Anton Webern, from "The Path to Twelve-Note
Composition" (1932)
Thomas Mann, from Dr. Faustus (1947)
Arthur Honegger, [The Twelve-Tone Method] (1951)
Leonard Bernstein, [The Twelve-Tone Method] (1976)
Benjamin Britten, [The Twelve-Tone Method] (1963)
7. Isms
Symbolism
Charles Baudelaire, from Richard Wagner and Tannhäuser
in Paris (1861)
Marcel Proust, from Swann's Way (1913)
Primitivism and Exoticism
Igor Stravinsky, "What I Wished to Express in The
Consecration of Spring" (1913)
Igor Stravinsky, from An Autobiography (1934)
Béla Bartók, "The Influence of Peasant Music on Modern
Music" (1931)
Expressionism
Richard Wagner, "Beethoven" (1870)
Oskar Kokoschka, Murderer, Hope of Women (1907, 1917)
Arnold Schoenberg, Letter to Wassily Kandinsky on Die
glückliche Hand (1910-13)
Theodor Adorno, from Philosophy of Modern Music (1948)
Neoclassicism and the New Objectivity
Rainer Maria Rilke, Sonnets to Orpheus 1.3 (1922)
Igor Stravinsky, from An Autobiography (1936)
Igor Stravinsky and Robert Craft, from Expositions and
Developments [Expressivity] (1962)
Igor Stravinsky and Robert Craft, from Expositions and
Developments [Pulcinella] (1962)
Igor Stravinsky and Robert Craft, from Dialogues
(1968)
Igor Stravinsky and Robert Craft, from Themes and
Conclusions (1969)
Arnold Schoenberg, from Three Satires (1925)
Ernst Krenek, from "New Humanity and Old Objectivity"
(1931)
Ernst Krenek, "Music and Mathematics" (1937)
Constant Lambert, "The Age of Pastiche" (1934)
Constant Lambert, [Stravinsky as Pasticheur] (1934)
Gertrude Stein, from Lectures in America (1935)
Maurice Ravel, Interview: [Ravel's Toys] (1933)
Maurice Ravel, Interview: "Finding Tunes in Factories"
(1933)
Dadaism and Surrealism
Kurt Schwitters: Ursonate: Rondo (1921-32)
Guillaume Apollinaire, Program Note for Parade (1917)
Erik Satie, Memoirs of an Amnesiac (1912)
Jean Cocteau, from Cock and Harlequin (1918)
Erwin Schulhoff, "For General Intelligibility as a
Confession" (1919)
Edith Sitwell, "Hornpipe" (1922)
Ernst Krenek, "What Is Called the New Music, and Why?"
(1937)
8. Music, Social Responsibility, and Politics
Hanns Eisler, "On Old and New Music" (1925)
Bertolt Brecht and Peter Suhrkamp, "The Modern Theatre
Is the Epic Theatre" (1930)
Friedrich Hollaender, Münchhausen (1931)
Friedrich Hollaender, "Cabaret" (1932)
Paul Hindemith, from A Composer's World (1949-50)
Peter Kien, Der Kaiser von Atlantis: Final Scene
(1943-44)
Arnold Schoenberg, A Survivor from Warsaw (1947)
L. N. Lebedinski, from Rayok: The Music Lesson (1957)
9. Testing the Boundaries between Popular and High Art
Ernest Ansermet, "On a Negro Orchestra" (1919)
Langston Hughes, The Big Sea (1940)
Langston Hughes, "Moon-Faced, Starry-Eyed" (1946-47)
Ivan Goll, "The Negroes Are Conquering Europe" (1926)
Daniel Gregory Mason, from Tune In, America (1931)
George Gershwin, "The Composer and the Machine Age"
(1933)
George Antheil, "The Negro on the Spiral, or A Method
of Negro Music" (1934)
Gene Krupa and Leonard Bernstein, "Has Jazz Influenced
the Symphony?" (1947)
Elliott Carter, "Once Again Swing" (1939)
Elliott Carter, "The Rhythmic Basis of American Music"
(1955)
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