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Analytical Strategies and Musical Interpretation
Essays on Nineteenth- And Twentieth-Century Music
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Edited by Craig Ayrey and Mark Everist
Cambridge University Press
Due/Published
January 2004, 333 pages,
paper
ISBN
0521543975
This book is devoted to music analysis as an interpretive activity. Interpretation is often considered only in theory, or as a philosophical problem, but this book attempts to demonstrate and reflect on the interpretive results of analysis. Two associated types of practice are emphasised: 'translation', the transformation of one type of experience or art object into the musical work, the artistic attempt to persuade us that the new product is as valid as its original, or more so than its origin; and 'rhetoric', the attempt to persuade us, through structure, to accept the signifying power of the work. The unifying theme of the essays is the interpretive transformation of concepts, ideas and forms that constitutes the heart of the compositional process of nineteenth- and twentieth-century music. The repertoire discussed ranges from Schumann through Wagner, Mahler, Zemlinsky, Debussy, Schoenberg, Berg, Webern and Stravinsky to Carter and Birtwistle. Contributors: Craig Ayrey, Stephen Walsh, Derrick Puffett, Michael Musgrave, Jonathan Dunsby, Jonathan W. Bernard, JONATHAN CROSS, KOFI AGAWU, ALAN STREET, ANTHONY POPLE, CAROLYN ABBATE, DAVID GRIFFITHS |
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