Neoclassical Music in America

Voices of Clarity and Restraint

Neoclassical Music in America cover

Neoclassical Music in America

Voices of Clarity and Restraint

Description

From the 1920s to the 1950s, neoclassicism was one of the dominant movements in American music. Today this music is largely in eclipse, mostly absent in performance and even from accounts of music history, in spite of—and initially because of—its adherence to an expanded tonality. No previous book has focused on the nature and scope of this musical tradition. Neoclassical Music in America: Voices of Clarity and Restraint makes clear what neoclassicism was, how it emerged in America, and what happened to it.

Music reviewer and scholar, R. James Tobin argues that efforts to define musical neoclassicism as a style largely fail because of the stylistic diversity of the music that fall within its scope. However, neoclassicists as different from one another as the influential Igor Stravinsky and Paul Hindemith did have a classical aesthetic in common, the basic characteristics of which extend to other neoclassicists This study focuses, in particular, on a group of interrelated neoclassical American composers who came to full maturity in the 1940s. These included Harvard professor Walter Piston, who had studied in France in the 1920s; Harold Shapero, the most traditional of the group; Irving Fine and Arthur Berger, his colleagues at Brandeis; Lukas Foss, later an experimentalist composer whose origins lay in neoclassicism of the 1940s; Alexei Haieff, and Ingolf Dahl, both close associates of Stravinsky; and others. Tobin surveys the careers of these figures, drawing especially on early reviews of performances before offering his own critical assessment of individual works.

Adventurous collectors of recordings, performing musicians, concert and broadcasting programmers, as well as music and cultural historians and those interested in musical aesthetics, will find much of interest here. Dates of composition, approximate duration of individual works, and discographies add to the work’s reference value.

Table of Contents

Preface
Chapter 1: Introduction: What Was Neoclassicism and What Became of It?
Chapter 2: European Influences on American Neoclassicism
Chapter 3: Edward Burlingame Hill: A Link to Paris
Chapter 4: Walter Piston: Spanning Two Generations
Chapter 5: Harold Shapero
Chapter 6: Irving Fine
Chapter 7: Arthur Berger
Chapter 8: Lukas Foss—His Early Period
Chapter 9: Alexei Haieff
Chapter 10: Ingolf Dahl
Chapter 11: Louise Talma
Chapter 12: John Lessard
Chapter 13: Nicolai Lopatnikoff
Chapter 14: Aaron Rabushka
Chapter 15: Conclusion
Discography
Bibliography
Index
About the Author

Product details

Published Jul 02 2014
Format Ebook (Epub & Mobi)
Edition 1st
Extent 300
ISBN 9780810884403
Imprint Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Series Modern Traditionalist Classical Music
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

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