Choral Treatises and Singing Societies in the Romantic Age

Author:   David Friddle ,  Amanda Quist
Publisher:   Lexington Books
ISBN:  

9781666911138


Pages:   400
Publication Date:   15 May 2024
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Choral Treatises and Singing Societies in the Romantic Age


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Author:   David Friddle ,  Amanda Quist
Publisher:   Lexington Books
Imprint:   Lexington Books/Fortress Academic
ISBN:  

9781666911138


ISBN 10:   1666911135
Pages:   400
Publication Date:   15 May 2024
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

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Reviews

"""David Friddle is the sleuth that found and has assembled the numerous puzzle pieces of choral methodology. Choral Treatises & Singing Societies in the Romantic Age fills a long-standing gap. Thanks to his diligence, we can trace the invention, development, and dissemination of choral singing and singing treatises from Berlin to Oklahoma City and beyond. This comprehensive history is the first of its kind and merits our study. I urge you to look inside and discover our collective roots as choral professionals."" --Jo-Michael Scheibe, University of Southern California ""This book has long been needed. It fills a gap in our knowledge of the development of choirs and choral singing in the nineteenth century, thereby providing useful background for more recent developments in the early twentieth century. David Friddle's scholarship is solid, the commentary stimulating, and the result illuminating. It is a very welcome addition to the literature."" --Nick Strimple, University of Southern California Friddle presents a history of 19th-century choral treatises and discusses the singing societies that such works supported. Sharing the joint goals of teaching music literacy and building choral ensembles, numerous treatises were written starting in the Romantic age, beginning with Michael Pfeiffer and Hans Georg N�geli's Vocal Training according to Pestalozzian Principles (1810) and including works by Joseph Mainzer, Andreas R�tzel, John Spencer Curwen, Lowell Mason, and many others. With industrialization, workers moved from rural areas to cities where higher wages and more leisure time helped to support the development of choral societies. Participants, first men and later both men and women, joined these groups and devoted serious attention to choral singing. Starting with the first significant choral society, the Sing-Akademie in Germany, Friddle traces the propagation of such groups to other European countries. Crossing the Atlantic, Friddle discusses the freed enslaved people who founded Fisk University and formed the Fisk Jubilee Singers in the 1870s, and the 19th-century singing-school movement, which provided a strong foundation for the singing societies that followed. In the absence of recordings, these choral treatises provide some idea of how 19th-century choruses sounded, as well as inspiration for modern choral directors. Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty; professionals. -- ""Choice Reviews"""


Author Information

David Friddle is a man of many talents: author, conductor, composer, organist, designer and accomplished chef. He has two doctorates in music: Juilliard School, 1988 (organ), and the University of Miami, 2006 (choral conducting). Dr. Friddle has worked as a church musician in multiple denomi-nations; a professional graphic designer for a NYC glossy magazine and a manufacturing company in Miami; adjunct faculty at the University of South Carolina Upstate; and as a line cook at restaurant Cibréo in Florence, Italy. In addition to his varied professional activities, David founded two gay men’s choruses—one in Greenville, SC and the second in Asheville, NC. In 1997 he managed the SC Gay Pride March, held in Greenville; the following year he oversaw public events for the NC Gay Pride March in Asheville. His dissertation Christus is published by Bärenreiter-Verlag of Germany, and he has had articles published in the Choral Journal, American Choral Review, Newsletter of the American Liszt Society and The American Organist. Dr. Friddle has conducted in seventeen states and Europe and has given organ recitals in the major cathedrals of England and around the United States.

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