Details
First Published: 01 Oct 2008
13 Digit ISBN: 9781580463010
Pages: 443
Size: 9 x 6
Binding: Paperback
Imprint: University of Rochester Press
Series:
Eastman Studies in MusicSubject:
MusicBIC Class: AV
Details updated on 10 Sep 2010
Contents
- 1 Introduction: Scholarly Inquiry in Historical Musicology: Sources, Methods, Interpretations
- 2 A Collaboration between Cipriano de Rore and Baldissera Donato?
- 3 New Perspectives on Bach's Great Eighteen Chorales
- 4 Historical Theology and Hymnology as Tools for Interpreting Bach's Church Cantatas: The Case of Ich elender Mensch, wer wird mich erlösen, BWV 48 BWV 48
- 5 Performance Practice Issues That Affect Meaning in Two Bach Instrumental Works
- 6 Mozart's Mitridate: Going beyond the Text
- 7 Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach and the Aesthetics of Patricide
- 8 Joseph Haydn's Influence on the Symphonies of Antonio Rosetti
- 9 Reason and Imagination: Beethoven's Aesthetic Evolution
- 10 Schubert as Formal Architect: The Quartrttsatz, D.703
- 11 Sex, Sexuality, and Schubert's Piano Music
- 12 "Le Belle Exécution": Johann Nepomuk Hummel's Treatise and the Art of Playing the Pianoforte
- 13 "For You Have Been Rebellious against the Lord": The Jewish Image in Mendelssohn's Moses and Marx's Mose
- 14 Andrea Maffei's "Ugly Sin": The Libretto for Verdi's I masnadieri
- 15 Mozart's Piano Concertos and the Romantic Generation
- 16 "Wo die Zitronen blühn": Re-Versions of Arie antiche
- 17 Material Culture and Postmodern Positivism: Rethinking the "Popular" in Late-Nineteenth Century French Music
- 18 Otto Gombosi's Correspondence at the University of Chicago
How do we know what notes a composer intended in a given piece? -- how those notes should be played and sung? -- the nature of musical life in Bach's Leipzig, Schubert's Vienna? -- how music related to literature and other arts and social currents in different times and places? -- what attitudes musicians and music lovers had toward the music that they heard and made?
We know all this from musical manuscripts and prints, opera libretti, composers' letters, reviews in newspapers and magazines, archival data, contemporary pedagogical writings, essays on aesthetics, and much else. Some of these categories of sources are the bedrock of music history and musicology. Others have begun to be examined only in recent years.
Furthermore, musicologists -- including biographers of famous composers -- now explore these various kinds of sources in a variety of ways, some of them richly traditional and others exciting and novel.
These seventeen essays, all newly written, use a wide array of source materials to probe issues pertaining to a cross section of musical works and musical life from the sixteenth through the twentieth centuries.
The resulting, pluralistic profile of current musicology will prove welcome to anyone fascinated by the problems of reconstructing -- reimagining, sometimes -- the evanescent musical art of the past and pondering its implications for musical life today and in the future.
Roberta Montemorra Marvin is a Research Fellow at the Obermann Center for Advanced Studies at the University of Iowa where she is also Director of the Institute for Italian Opera Studies; Stephen A. Crist is associate professor and chair of the Music Department at Emory University.
Reviews
In this book some of the best minds in current musicology explore untrodden territory. They show that the classic source study and the traditional methods of musical analysis are not only alive and kicking, but generating new rich ideas -- some of them controversial, all of them stimulating. --Nicholas Temperley, professor emeritus of musicology, University of Illinois, and author of
Bound for America: Three British Composers Striding onto the stage of the 'New Musicology', the seventeen contributors to
Historical Musicology proceed to kick in the footlights. Out of the broken glass, they manage to create an approach to the scholarly study of music that recognises that musical scholarship [whatever its methodological imperatives] remains rooted in the study of primary sources, and go on to demonstrate brilliantly how the benefits of the 'New' can be combined with the 'Old'. --Mark Everist, professor of music, University of Southampton