Harrison Birtwistle Studies

Harrison Birtwistle Studies
Author :
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Total Pages : 335
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781316300398
ISBN-13 : 1316300390
Rating : 4/5 (98 Downloads)

Synopsis Harrison Birtwistle Studies by : David Beard

This collection of essays celebrates the work of Sir Harrison Birtwistle, one of the key figures in European contemporary music. Representing current research on Birtwistle's music, this book reflects the diversity of his work in terms of periods, genres, forms, techniques and related issues through a wide range of critical, theoretical and analytical interpretations and perspectives. Written by a team of international scholars, all of whom bring a deep research-based knowledge and insight to their chosen study, this collection extends the scholarly understanding of Birtwistle through new engagements with the man and the music. The contributors provide detailed studies of Birtwistle's engagement with electronic music in the 1960s and 1970s, and develop theoretical explanations of his fascination with pulse, rhythm and time. They also explore in detail Birtwistle's interest in poetry, instrumental drama, gesture, procession and landscape, and consider the compositional processes that underpin these issues.

Harrison Birtwistle Studies

Harrison Birtwistle Studies
Author :
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Total Pages : 335
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781107093744
ISBN-13 : 1107093740
Rating : 4/5 (44 Downloads)

Synopsis Harrison Birtwistle Studies by : David Beard

This collection represents current research on Birtwistle's music, reflecting the diversity of his work through a wide range of perspectives.

Harrison Birtwistle Studies

Harrison Birtwistle Studies
Author :
Publisher :
Total Pages :
Release :
ISBN-10 : 131632379X
ISBN-13 : 9781316323793
Rating : 4/5 (9X Downloads)

Synopsis Harrison Birtwistle Studies by : David Beard

This collection represents current research on Birtwistle's music, reflecting the diversity of his work through a wide-range of perspectives.

Harrison Birtwistle

Harrison Birtwistle
Author :
Publisher : Cornell University Press
Total Pages : 314
Release :
ISBN-10 : 0801486726
ISBN-13 : 9780801486722
Rating : 4/5 (26 Downloads)

Synopsis Harrison Birtwistle by : Jonathan Cross

Sir Harrison Birtwistle is the most original, the most challenging, and the most controversial British composer of our time. His notoriously angular music is at once defiantly modernist and deeply indebted to the traditions, medieval and modern, of English music. Birtwistle composes for ensembles of every size and shape but is perhaps best known for his music for the opera stage. His opera Gawain, possibly his most famous work, is fully characteristic in its marriage of a modernist musical language and a mythic subject. Accessible to anyone with an interest in modern music, this book uncovers the sources of Birtwistle's art and presents a critical account of his musical, dramatic, and aesthetic preoccupations through an exploration of such topics as theater, myth, ritual, pastoral, pulse, and line. It places Birtwistle in a broad cultural context, examining the composers and painters who have influenced his work.

Harrison Birtwistle's Operas and Music Theatre

Harrison Birtwistle's Operas and Music Theatre
Author :
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Total Pages : 489
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780521895347
ISBN-13 : 0521895340
Rating : 4/5 (47 Downloads)

Synopsis Harrison Birtwistle's Operas and Music Theatre by : David Beard

A definitive source study of the stage works of Harrison Birtwistle, one of Britain's foremost living composers.

Harrison Birtwistle

Harrison Birtwistle
Author :
Publisher : Faber & Faber
Total Pages : 213
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780571308125
ISBN-13 : 0571308120
Rating : 4/5 (25 Downloads)

Synopsis Harrison Birtwistle by : Fiona Maddocks

'Anyone with the smallest interest in composition - not just concertos but novels, buildings, lives, you name it, should read this absorbing, spiky, dazzling book.' Adam Thirwell, TLS Books of the Year Harrison Birtwistle is recognised worldwide as one of the greatest of living composers, behind such works of trail-blazingly modern classical music as The Shadow of Night and The Mask of Orpheus, famously staged at the English National Opera in 1986, and winner of the Grawemeyer Award. His music is both deeply original and highly personal, yet he has always been notoriously reticent about explaining either his music or himself. In this 'conversation diary', spanning six months, he talks openly to the distinguished writer and critic Fiona Maddocks (author of the acclaimed Hildegard of Bingen: The Woman of her Age), offering rare insights into the challenges, uncertainties and rewards which have shaped his life and work since childhood, and which remain with him today as he enters his ninth decade. We see the composer in the privacy of his Wiltshire studio and garden, and in the public glare of the elite Salzburg and Aldeburgh Festivals. But mostly he is at his kitchen table, talking about the essential aspects of his life - family, cooking, cricket, landscape, pruning trees - and reflecting on the never easy-process of composition. What distinguishes him and his remarkable music is an ability to see the extraordinary in the everyday, giving rise to work that is both elemental and profound. For anyone concerned with the future of music this book is essential reading.

The Music of Harrison Birtwistle

The Music of Harrison Birtwistle
Author :
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Total Pages : 261
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780521027809
ISBN-13 : 0521027802
Rating : 4/5 (09 Downloads)

Synopsis The Music of Harrison Birtwistle by : Robert Adlington

Harrison Birtwistle has become the most eminent and acclaimed of contemporary British composers. This book provides a comprehensive view of his large and varied output. It contains descriptions of every published work, and also of a number of withdrawn and unpublished pieces. Revealing light is often cast on the more familiar pieces by considering these lesser-known areas of Birtwistle's oeuvre. The book is structured around a number of broad themes - themes of significance to Birtwistle, but also to much other music. These include theatre, song, time and texture. This approach emphasizes the music's multifarious ways of meaning; now that even the academic world no longer takes the merits of 'difficult' contemporary music for granted, it is all the more important to assess what it represents beyond mere technical innovation. Adlington thus avoids in-depth technical analysis, focusing instead upon the music's wider cultural significance.

The Cambridge Companion to Twentieth-Century Opera

The Cambridge Companion to Twentieth-Century Opera
Author :
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Total Pages : 430
Release :
ISBN-10 : 0521780098
ISBN-13 : 9780521780094
Rating : 4/5 (98 Downloads)

Synopsis The Cambridge Companion to Twentieth-Century Opera by : Mervyn Cooke

This Companion celebrates the extraordinary riches of the twentieth-century operatic repertoire in a collection of specially commissioned essays written by a distinguished team of academics, critics and practitioners. Beginning with a discussion of the century's vital inheritance from late-romantic operatic traditions in Germany and Italy, the text embraces fresh investigations into various aspects of the genre in the modern age, with a comprehensive coverage of the work of individual composers from Debussy and Schoenberg to John Adams and Harrison Birtwistle. Traditional stylistic categorizations (including symbolism, expressionism, neo-classicism and minimalism) are reassessed from new critical perspectives, and the distinctive operatic traditions of Continental and Eastern Europe, Russia and the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom and United States are subjected to fresh scrutiny. The volume includes essays devoted to avant-garde music theatre, operettas and musicals, filmed opera, and ends with a discussion of the position of the genre in today's cultural marketplace.

The Persistence of Melancholia in Arts and Culture

The Persistence of Melancholia in Arts and Culture
Author :
Publisher : Routledge
Total Pages : 426
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780429887765
ISBN-13 : 0429887760
Rating : 4/5 (65 Downloads)

Synopsis The Persistence of Melancholia in Arts and Culture by : Andrea Bubenik

This book explores the history and continuing relevance of melancholia as an amorphous but richly suggestive theme in literature, music, and visual culture, as well as philosophy and the history of ideas. Inspired by Albrecht Dürer’s engraving Melencolia I (1514)—the first visual representation of artistic melancholy—this volume brings together contributions by scholars from a variety of disciplines. Topics include: Melencolia I and its reception; how melancholia inhabits landscapes, soundscapes, figures and objects; melancholia in medical and psychological contexts; how melancholia both enables and troubles artistic creation; and Sigmund Freud’s essay "Mourning and Melancholia" (1917).

British Musical Modernism

British Musical Modernism
Author :
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Total Pages : 507
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781316297988
ISBN-13 : 1316297985
Rating : 4/5 (88 Downloads)

Synopsis British Musical Modernism by : Philip Rupprecht

British Musical Modernism explores the works of eleven key composers to reveal the rapid shifts of expression and technique that transformed British art music in the post-war period. Responding to radical avant-garde developments in post-war Europe, the Manchester Group composers - Alexander Goehr, Peter Maxwell Davies, and Harrison Birtwistle - and their contemporaries assimilated the serial-structuralist preoccupations of mid-century internationalism to an art grounded in resurgent local traditions. In close readings of some thirty-five scores, Philip Rupprecht traces a modernism suffused with the formal elegance of the 1950s, the exuberant theatricality of the 1960s, and - in the works of David Bedford and Tim Souster - the pop, minimalist, and live-electronic directions of the early 1970s. Setting music-analytic insights against a broader social-historical backdrop, Rupprecht traces a British musical modernism that was at once a collective artistic endeavor, and a sounding myth of national identity.