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Awards
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: J. Peter Burkholder , Leonard SlatkinPublisher: Rowman & Littlefield Imprint: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.649kg ISBN: 9781442247949ISBN 10: 1442247940 Pages: 224 Publication Date: 15 November 2020 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsForeword Acknowledgments Timeline Introduction Chapter 1: A Most Unusual Career, and a Recital of Songs Memories * The Circus Band * Walking * The Cage * Down East * General William Booth Enters into Heaven Chapter 2: An American Musical Childhood Holiday Quickstep * Variations on America Chapter 3: Apprenticeship Feldeinsamkeit * Ich grolle nicht * Symphony No. 1 in D Minor Chapter 4: Weaving the Threads String Quartet No. 1 * Psalm 67 * Yale-Princeton Football Game Chapter 5: Seeking and Finding Central Park in the Dark * The Unanswered Question Chapter 6: Synthesizing American and European Music Symphony No. 2 Chapter 7: A New Form Symphony No. 3: The Camp Meeting * The Violin Sonatas Chapter 8: American Holidays A Symphony: New England Holidays Chapter 9: American Histories Orchestral Set No. 1: Three Places in New England * Orchestral Set No. 2 Chapter 10: American Literature Piano Sonata No. 2: Concord, Mass., 1840-1860 Chapter 11: Transcendent Journeys String Quartet No. 2 * Symphony No. 4 Chapter 12: Collecting Songs, and Late Works 114 Songs * Psalm 90 Epilogue Selected Reading Selected Listening About the AuthorReviewsIt's a delight when a leading expert explains his specialty in simple terms, as Peter Burkholder does here with Charles Ives. Admitting what's strange in the music and elucidating why the strangeness works, he's given non-musicians a thruway into Ives's complex and colorful world.--Kyle Gann, author, Charles Ives's Concord: Essays After a Sonata Lucky Ives, to have an advocate as eloquent as Peter Burkholder. No one knows Ives better, no one loves his music more, and no one communicates with greater verve its intensely affecting qualities.--Richard Taruskin, author, Oxford History of Western Music Part deejay, part docent, Burkholder takes us on a tour of Ives's music, clearly laying out the markers of the composer's expertly inventive and compassionate imagination.--Donald Berman, pianist of the CDs The Unknown Ives and Chair of Piano at The Longy School of Music of Bard College Despite the recognition Charles Ives has received in the last 50 years, many concertgoers still find listening to Ives a bewildering, even unpleasant experience. In this, his fifth book on the American composer, Ives authority J. Peter Burkholder hopes to change that. He examines 20 works in chronological order of composition and an equal number of Ives's songs to illustrate his evolution from a creator of works in conventional musical traditions and forms to ones of original conception, radical technique, and high spiritual striving. Burkholder uses biography to place each of these works within the context of Ives's life and intellectual experiences at the time of its composition; musical analysis to illustrate his compositional techniques, structural logic, and aesthetic/philosophical purposes; and performance history to trace the changing perception of his once-daunting creations. Burkholder also seeks to place Ives and his music in the mainstream of Western musical history rather than viewing him as an isolated and eccentric artist out of contact with the musical world around him. This book can be enjoyed at all levels, from those as yet unacquainted with Ives's wide-ranging output, to those who have been listening to him with wonder and pleasure for a lifetime. Highly recommended.-- Choice Reviews Part deejay, part docent, J. Peter Burkholder takes us on a tour of Charles Ives's music, clearly laying out the markers of the composer's expertly inventive and compassionate imagination.--Donald Berman, pianist of the CDs The Unknown Ives and Chair of Piano at The Longy School of Music of Bard College This is an astute and inventive book, intended for people who love music of any kind but may not be able to read musical notation. Burkholder is perhaps the most prominent Ives authority living today, but he proves himself to be more than that: a patient and resourceful tour guide for people wondering what classical music (Western art music, or whatever one calls it) might have to offer.-- The Arts Fuse It's a delight when a leading expert explains his specialty in simple terms, as Burkholder does here with Charles Ives. He's given non-musicians a thruway into Ives's complex and colorful world.--Kyle Gann, author, Charles Ives's Concord: Essays After a Sonata Lucky Ives, to have an advocate as eloquent as Burkholder. No one knows Ives better, no one loves his music more, and no one communicates with greater verve its intensely affecting qualities.--Richard Taruskin, author, Oxford History of Western Music Whether an experienced Ivesian or coming to the music for the first time, read, listen, and enjoy.--Leonard Slatkin, internationally acclaimed conductor Lucky Ives, to have an advocate as eloquent as Peter Burkholder. No one knows Ives better, no one loves his music more, and no one communicates with greater verve its intensely affecting qualities.--Richard Taruskin, author, Oxford History of Western Music Part deejay, part docent, Burkholder takes us on a tour of Ives's music, clearly laying out the markers of the composer's expertly inventive and compassionate imagination.--Donald Berman, pianist of the CDs The Unknown Ives and Chair of Piano at The Longy School of Music of Bard College "Despite the recognition Charles Ives has received in the last 50 years, many concertgoers still find listening to Ives a bewildering, even unpleasant experience. In this, his fifth book on the American composer, Ives authority J. Peter Burkholder hopes to change that. He examines 20 works in chronological order of composition and an equal number of Ives's songs to illustrate his evolution from a creator of works in conventional musical traditions and forms to ones of original conception, radical technique, and high spiritual striving. Burkholder uses biography to place each of these works within the context of Ives's life and intellectual experiences at the time of its composition; musical analysis to illustrate his compositional techniques, structural logic, and aesthetic/philosophical purposes; and performance history to trace the changing perception of his once-daunting creations. Burkholder also seeks to place Ives and his music in the mainstream of Western musical history rather than viewing him as an isolated and eccentric artist out of contact with the musical world around him. This book can be enjoyed at all levels, from those as yet unacquainted with Ives's wide-ranging output, to those who have been listening to him with wonder and pleasure for a lifetime. Highly recommended. -- ""Choice Reviews"" It is always a genuine pleasure to read a work from someone who not only knows intimately the subject matter about which he is writing, but is also a talented prose stylist, and even more so since the author claims on the first page that this is the sort of book, he ""has always wanted to write."" The reader ends up being lucky on several other counts, but the most important is the depth of knowledge that J. Peter Burkholder so willingly, skillfully, and even joyfully shares with his readers... The book is, in every sense, an invitation to listen. Offering referenced recordings and encouraging the reader to listen, read, listen again, and perhaps even read along while listening, Burkholder opens the door and guides readers through what Ives hoped everyone would do in their heads as they heard his, or indeed any music. That was to create the listening experience for themselves. -- ""Association for Recorded Sound Collections Journal"" It's a delight when a leading expert explains his specialty in simple terms, as Burkholder does here with Charles Ives. He's given non-musicians a thruway into Ives's complex and colorful world. --Kyle Gann, author, Charles Ives's Concord: Essays After a Sonata Lucky Ives, to have an advocate as eloquent as Burkholder. No one knows Ives better, no one loves his music more, and no one communicates with greater verve its intensely affecting qualities. --Richard Taruskin, author, Oxford History of Western Music Part deejay, part docent, J. Peter Burkholder takes us on a tour of Charles Ives's music, clearly laying out the markers of the composer's expertly inventive and compassionate imagination. --Donald Berman, pianist of the CDs ""The Unknown Ives"" and Chair of Piano at The Longy School of Music of Bard College This is an astute and inventive book, intended for people who love music of any kind but may not be able to read musical notation. Burkholder is perhaps the most prominent Ives authority living today, but he proves himself to be more than that: a patient and resourceful tour guide for people wondering what classical music (Western art music, or whatever one calls it) might have to offer. -- ""The Arts Fuse"" Whether an experienced Ivesian or coming to the music for the first time, read, listen, and enjoy. --Leonard Slatkin" Author InformationJ. Peter Burkholder is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Musicology at the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music. He is the author of the recent editions of A History of Western Music (2014, with Donald Jay Grout and Claude V. Palisca) and Norton Anthology of Western Music (with Claude V. Palisca), His research has won awards from the American Musicological Society, the Society for American Music, and ASCAP, among others. He has served as President of the American Musicological Society and of the Charles Ives Society. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |