Making Music Modern: New York in the 1920s

Awards:   Winner of ASCAP Deems Taylor Award Lowens Book Award from the Society for American Music. Winner of Winner, Lowens Book Award, Society for American Music.
Author:   Carol J. Oja (Margaret and David Bottoms Professor of Music and American Studies, Margaret and David Bottoms Professor of Music and American Studies, College of William and Mary)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
ISBN:  

9780195162578


Pages:   512
Publication Date:   27 February 2003
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Making Music Modern: New York in the 1920s


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Awards

  • Winner of ASCAP Deems Taylor Award Lowens Book Award from the Society for American Music.
  • Winner of Winner, Lowens Book Award, Society for American Music.

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Carol J. Oja (Margaret and David Bottoms Professor of Music and American Studies, Margaret and David Bottoms Professor of Music and American Studies, College of William and Mary)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 14.40cm , Height: 3.30cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.771kg
ISBN:  

9780195162578


ISBN 10:   0195162579
Pages:   512
Publication Date:   27 February 2003
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.

Table of Contents

"An Introduction: The Modern Music Shop Enter the Moderns 1: Leo Ornstein: ""Wild Man"" of the 1910s 2: Creating a God: The Reception of Edgar Varèse 3: The Arrival of European Modernism The Machine in the Concert Hall 4: Engineers of Art 5: Ballet Mécanique and International Modernist Networks Spirituality and American Dissonance 6: Dane Rudhyar's Vision of Dissonance 7: The Ecstasy of Carl Ruggles 8: Henry Cowell's ""Throbbing Masses of Sounds"" 9: Ruth Crawford and the Apotheosis of Spiritual Dissonance Myths and Institutions 10: A Forgotten Vanguard: The Legacy of Marion Bauer, Louis Gruenberg, Frederick Jacobi, and Emerson Whitmore 11: Organizing the Moderns 12: Women Patrons and Activists New World Neoclassicism 13: Neoclassicism: ""Orthodox Europeanism"" or Empowering Internationalism? 14: The Transatlantic Gaze of Aaron Copland 15: Virgil Thomson's ""Cocktail of Culture"" 16: A Quartet of New World Neoclassicists European Modernists and American Critics 17: Europeans in Performance and on Tour 18: Visionary Critics Widening Horizons 19: Modernism and ""The Jazz Age"" 20: Crossing Over with George Gershwin, Paul Whiteman, and the Modernists Epilogue Selected Discography"

Reviews

Carol Oja's Making Music Modern: New York in the 1920s is a work of remarkable ambition and of equally remarkable achievement. ... Drawing on extensive, impressively documented research into primary sources and secondary literature, Oja illuminates both history and reception history in a gracefully written text that is enhanced with generous pictorial ad musical illustrations. This is a book that will command the attention of any reader with an interest in twentieth-century musical culture. ... This book is in every respect a major addition to the literature on American music. --Journal of the American Musicological Society<br> Pioneering....This is important history, and [Oja] cover[s] all of it, conservatives and radicals alike, with fascinating sidelights on critics, female patrons of contemporary music and of course on individual composers....[Oja reveals] that modern music in the 20's was diverse and multicultural, with jazz and Latin overtones, women composers and one strong African-American, William Grant Still. And [she shows] that American modernism could be provocatively different from the European kind. --The New York Times Book Review<br> [A] superb exploration of the classical music scene in New York City during the 1920s and early 1930s....Profiles a variety of composers, both well known (Aaron Copland) and little remembered (Dane Rudhyar)....[Oja's] ability to show how styles such as neoclassicism and the use of technology or dissonance combined to form a new genre of American' music is a distinguishing feature....Exhaustively researched and written in an intelligent, engaging style, this book is highly recommended. --Library Journal<br> Marvelous....[Oja] wiselyrecognizes both the internationalism of the music scene during the 1920s [and] the huge importance of the developing new music infrastructure that emerged during the 1920s....Oja avoids the cultural exclusivity so prevalent among musicologists in her virtuosic contextualization of the emerging new music in the broader world of arts and ideas....A remarkable study. --Institute for Studies in American Music<br> Brings a multidimensional perspective to examining the music scene in 1920s New York. Having unearthed extensive archival materials (including interviews, correspondence and little-known music manuscripts), Oja dispels many myths and considers art in conjunction with contemporary social, cultural, and political issues. --Publishers Weekly<br> A richly nuanced history that illuminates particular compositions as well as the general relationship between modern music and modern life....A compelling, insightful, and readable study of the fascinating world of new music in New York. --Notes<br> If the visual art and literature of that era has so far received considerably more attention from historians than has its musical legacy, this absorbing study by Carol J. Oja goes a long way towards correcting the deficiency....Making Music Modern offers a wide-angle history of the new music in and of New York in the 1920's. As befits its subject, it is teeming with names and events and packed with information: any reader....will learn new things....The author's evident love for the New York of those years is stamped on every page, and her enthusiasm for it musical legacy is infectious....There are innumerable gems or interesting snippets of information throughout....In its rich accumulation ofdetail, its overlapping and sometimes conflicting perspectives, and its occasional confusion of the substantial and the imaginary, Oja's book on New York is a mirror of its wonderful subject....Making Music Modern will be for many readers a bridge to an enticing new world. --Music & Letters<br> If the visual art and literature of that era has so far received considerably more attention from historians than has its musical legacy, this absorbing study by Carol J. Oja goes a long way towards correcting the deficiency. --<br>usic & Letters<br>


<br> Carol Oja's Making Music Modern: New York in the 1920s is a work of remarkable ambition and of equally remarkable achievement. ... Drawing on extensive, impressively documented research into primary sources and secondary literature, Oja illuminates both history and reception history in a gracefully written text that is enhanced with generous pictorial ad musical illustrations. This is a book that will command the attention of any reader with an interest in twentieth-century musical culture. ... This book is in every respect a major addition to the literature on American music. --Journal of the American Musicological Society<br> Pioneering....This is important history, and [Oja] cover[s] all of it, conservatives and radicals alike, with fascinating sidelights on critics, female patrons of contemporary music and of course on individual composers....[Oja reveals] that modern music in the 20's was diverse and multicultural, with jazz and Latin overtones, women composers and one strong


Author Information

Carol Oja is Margaret and David Bottoms Professor of Music and Professor of American Studies at the College of William and Mary. She is also the author of Colin McPhee: Composer in Two Worlds, which won the ASCAP-Deems Taylor Award, and American Music Recordings: A Discography of U.S. Composers.

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