Harrison Birtwistle: Man, Mind, Music

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Cornell University Press, 2000 - 295 páginas

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.

Dentro del libro

Contenido

Episodion I Theatres
65
Episodion II Myth and Ritual
92
Episodion III Pastoral
135
StasimonVerses and Refrains
150
Episodion IVA Pulse Sampler
174
Line Melody Tonality
200
Exodos Futures
239
Chronological Catalogue of Works
265
Bibliography
281
Derechos de autor

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Términos y frases comunes

Acerca del autor (2000)

Jonathan Cross is Lecturer in Music at the University of Oxford and Tutor of Christ Church. He has written and lectured widely on twentieth-century music and is the author of The Stravinsky Legacy and editor of The Cambridge Companion to Stravinsky. He is also the Editor of Music Analysis.

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