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Keys to the Drama
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 252

Keys to the Drama

Sonata form is fundamentally a dramatic structure that creates, manipulates, and ultimately satisfies expectation. It engages its audience by inviting prediction, association, and interpretation. That sonata form was the chief vehicle of dramatic instrumental music for nearly 200 years is due to the power, the universality, and the tonal and stylistic adaptability of its conception. This book presents nine studies whose central focus is sonata form. Their diversity attests both to the manifold analytical approaches to which the form responds, and to the vast range of musical possibility within the form's exemplars. At the same time, common compositional issues, analytical methods, and overarching perspectives on the essential nature of the form weave their way through the volume.

Britten's Donne, Hardy and Blake Songs
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 199

Britten's Donne, Hardy and Blake Songs

Presents a first analytical study that looks at the overarching designs of Benjamin Britten's John Donne, Thomas Hardy and William Blake solo song cycles. By questioning when a group of songs ought to be understood not merely as a collection, but as a cycle, Sly shows that Britten's personal selection and arrangement is indispensable to understanding these cycles' extra-musical communication. The Holy Sonnets of John Donne, Winter Words (poems by Hardy) and Songs and Proverbs of William Blake - composed in 1945, 1953 and 1965 respectively - each represent a philosophical exploration. The terrains set out by the three poets are distinct, but also engage one another in important and unexpected...

Singing in Signs
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 401

Singing in Signs

Singing in Signs: New Semiotic Explorations of Opera offers a bold and refreshing assessment of the state of opera study as seen through the lens of semiotics. At its core, the volume responds to Carolyn Abbate and Roger Parker's Analyzing Opera, utilizing a semiotic framework to embrace opera on its own terms and engage all of its constituent elements in interpretation. Chapters in this collection resurrect the larger sense of serious operatic study as a multi-faceted, interpretive discipline, no longer in isolation. Contributors pay particular attention to the musical, dramatic, cultural, and performative in opera and how these modes can create an intertext that informs interpretation. Combining traditional and emerging methodologies, Singing in Signs engages composer-constructed and work-specific music-semiotic systems, broader socio-cultural music codes, and narrative strategies, with implications for performance and staging practices today.

Twentieth- and Twenty-First-Century Song Cycles
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 280

Twentieth- and Twenty-First-Century Song Cycles

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2020
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Twentieth- and Twenty-First-Century Song Cycles: Analytical Pathways Toward Performance presents analyses of fourteen song cycles composed after the turn of the twentieth century, with a focus on offering "ways into" the musical and poetic structure of each cycle to performers, scholars, and students alike. Ranging from familiar works of twentieth-century music by composers such as Schoenberg, Britten, Poulenc, and Shostakovich to lesser-known works by Van Wyk, Sviridov, Wheeler, and Sánchez, this collection of essays captures the diversity of the song cycle repertoire in contemporary classical music. The contributors bring their own analytical perspectives and methods, considering musical structures, the composers' selection of texts, how poetic narratives are expressed, and historical context. Informed by music history, music theory, and performance, Twentieth- and Twenty-First-Century Song Cycles offers an essential guide into the contemporary art-music song cycle for performers, scholars, students, and anyone seeking to understand this unique genre.

Dissertation Abstracts International
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 860

Dissertation Abstracts International

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1996
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

A catechism on skirmishing and outpost duty
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 102

A catechism on skirmishing and outpost duty

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1876
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

American Doctoral Dissertations
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 800

American Doctoral Dissertations

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1994
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

The Cambridge Companion to John Donne
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 312

The Cambridge Companion to John Donne

The Cambridge Companion to John Donne introduces students (undergraduate and graduate) to the range, brilliance, and complexity of John Donne. Sixteen essays, written by an international array of leading scholars and critics, cover Donne's poetry (erotic, satirical, devotional) and his prose (including his Sermons and occasional letters). Providing readings of his texts and also fully situating them in the historical and cultural context of early modern England, these essays offer the most up-to-date scholarship and introduce students to the current thinking and debates about Donne, while providing tools for students to read Donne with greater understanding and enjoyment. Special features include a chronology; a short biography; essays on political and religious contexts; an essay on the experience of reading his lyrics; a meditation on Donne by the contemporary novelist A. S. Byatt; and an extensive bibliography of editions and criticism.

Winter at Death's Hotel
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 368

Winter at Death's Hotel

"A fast-paced and exciting read."—Telegraph & Argus (UK) New York, January 1896. Arthur Conan Doyle, the renowned created of Sherlock Holmes, arrives with his wife Louisa at the Britannic Hotel in New York for his first American tour. While Arthur prepares his lectures, Louisa becomes entranced by the vibrant, dangerous metropolis brimming with debauchery and iniquity around every corner. When a woman's mutilated corpse turns up in a Bowery alley, Louisa recognizes the victim as someone she's seen in the hotel. Obsessed with the woman's gruesome death, Louisa starts piecing together clues to reveal a story of murder and depravity—a story that leads back to the hotel itself and a madman w...

Martin, a Martin Family Genealogy
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 556

Martin, a Martin Family Genealogy

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1980
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  • Publisher: Unknown

John Martin (1794-1877) and his wife, Margaret Dodds Martin brought two daughters to America from Ireland in 1830. After moving to Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, they had eight more children. Descendants lived in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Iowa, Colorado, and Kansas as well as in Canada and Australia.