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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Evan Jones (Royalty Account) , David Clampitt , David Headlam , David NeumeyerPublisher: Boydell & Brewer Ltd Imprint: University of Rochester Press Volume: v. 70 Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.60cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.620kg ISBN: 9781580462297ISBN 10: 1580462294 Pages: 326 Publication Date: 31 December 2009 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsThe String Quartets of Debussy and Ravel - Marianne Wheeldon Sibelius's Internal Voices : Structure and Process in the Quartet in D Minor (Voces Intimae), Op. 56 - Joseph C. Kraus The Pitch Language of the Bartok Quartets - Joseph N. Straus The String Quartet in the Music of Paul Hindemith - David Neumeyer Comprehensibility, Variation, and the String Quartet Tradition: The Second Movement of Arnold Schoenberg's Third Quartet, Op. 30 - Matthew R. Shaftel Process in the String Quartets of Alban Berg - David Headlam Webern's Music for String Quartet - David Clampitt Villa-Lobos's String Quartets - Eero Tarasti Appropriate Tradition: The String Quartets of Sergei Prokofiev, Opp. 50 and 92 - Neil MinturnReviewsIn November 2010 Intimate Voices won the Society for Music Theory's Citation of Special Merit. This citation is awarded to editions, translations, reference works, or edited volumes of extraordinary value to the discipline. The citation states: '(Intimate Voices) examines the string quartets of composers from Claude Debussy through Shulamit Ran, and including those of Berg, Bartok, Schoenberg, Prokofiev, Ligeti, Cage, Britten, Carter, Berio, and others. The twenty different contributing authors provide multiple analytical voices, resulting in a contrapuntal conversation much like the string quartet medium under review. Superb. . . . A unified and eminently readable narrative. . . . The most thorough, authoritative and comprehensive study of modern chamber music. . . . Standards of production are up to the publisher's usual high standards. . . . Each contributor skilfully, sensitively and intelligently . . . sets the music s/he is considering in the widest historical and musical context. . . . Useful reading for players as well as listeners, composers and others. CLASSICALNET (Mark Sealey) Read the complete review at http://www.classical.net/music/books/reviews/1580462294a.php>. A magnificent sweep through many key works in twentieth-century musical history. JOURNAL OF THE SOCIETY FOR MUSIC IN IRELAND (Michael Russ) See full review at http://www.music.ucc.ie/jsmi/index.php/jsmi/article/view/84/93 Intimate Voices takes us on a kaleidoscopic ride through a century of string quartets. Players, historians, and theorists alike will appreciate the deeply musical commitment of twenty major writers exploring this medium, from Debussy to modern American, with composers such as Bartok and Scelsi in the same optic, through evidence-based music analysis in a social context. It is a Herculean project, superbly executed by editor Evan Jones. --Jonathan Dunsby, professor of music theory, Eastman School of Music A broad collection of serious essays about music in a medium that is very much alive. . . . There is something here for everyone, not just specialists in musical analysis. . . . It is also good that the work of several composers whose quartets are not often heard-Carter's, Scelsi's, Powell's, and Ran's-are brought to our attention. . . . Each (essay) has something interesting to say about the medium and the music and how we can talk about it.FANFARE In November 2010 Intimate Voices won the Society for Music Theory's Citation of Special Merit. This citation is awarded to 'editions, translations, reference works, or edited volumes of extraordinary value to the discipline.' The citation states: '[Intimate Voices] examines the string quartets of composers from Claude Debussy through Shulamit Ran, and including those of Berg, Bartok, Schoenberg, Prokofiev, Ligeti, Cage, Britten, Carter, Berio, and others. The twenty different contributing authors provide multiple analytical voices, resulting in a contrapuntal conversation much like the string quartet medium under review. * . * Superb. . . . A unified and eminently readable narrative. . . . The most thorough, authoritative and comprehensive study of modern chamber music. . . . Standards of production are up to the publisher's usual high standards. . . . Each contributor skilfully, sensitively and intelligently . . . sets the music s/he is considering in the widest historical and musical context. . . . Useful reading for players as well as listeners, composers and others. CLASSICALNET [Mark Sealey] Read the complete review at . * . * A magnificent sweep through many key works in twentieth-century musical history. -- Michael Russ, See full review at http://www.music.ucc.ie/jsmi/index.php/jsmi/article/view/84/93 * JOURNAL OF THE SOCIETY FOR MUSIC IN IRELAND * Intimate Voices takes us on a kaleidoscopic ride through a century of string quartets. Players, historians, and theorists alike will appreciate the deeply musical commitment of twenty major writers exploring this medium, from Debussy to modern American, with composers such as Bartok and Scelsi in the same optic, through evidence-based music analysis in a social context. It is a Herculean project, superbly executed by editor Evan Jones. -, professor of music theory, Eastman School of Music -- Jonathan Dunsby A broad collection of serious essays about music in a medium that is very much alive. . . . There is something here for everyone, not just specialists in musical analysis. . . . It is also good that the work of several composers whose quartets are not often heard-Carter's, Scelsi's, Powell's, and Ran's-are brought to our attention. . . . Each [essay] has something interesting to say about the medium and the music and how we can talk about it. * FANFARE * Intimate Voices takes us on a kaleidoscopic ride through a century of string quartets. Players, historians, and theorists alike will appreciate the deeply musical commitment of twenty major writers exploring this medium, from Debussy to modern American, with composers such as Bartok and Scelsi in the same optic, through evidence-based music analysis in a social context. It is a Herculean project, superbly executed by editor Evan Jones. --Jonathan Dunsby, professor of music theory, Eastman School of Music Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |