Selected Songs of the Munich School, 1870-1920


Book Description

The Munich School of composers, active from the last decades of the nineteenth century and into the twentieth, embraced Wagner's harmonic language but eschewed the compositional devices associated with modernism. Their compositional approach produced a unique form of late romanticism that is highly sophisticated and yet appealing and accessible to a sizable public. This anthology presents fifty-two songs in eleven collections by seven composers from the cultural and music-educational milieu of Munich. While each composer developed his own "personal style," there is also much that binds the songs together with respect to both the compositional techniques and literary tastes of their authors--much beyond the usual shared features of turn-of-the-century music in general. URL:https://www.areditions.com/rr/rrn/n054.html




Complete Songs for Solo Voice and Piano, Part 1


Book Description

Britain, long revered for its choral music and partsongs, had largely neglected art songs since the Elizabethan era. The middle of the nineteenth century witnessed efforts to revive the genre, particularly in the works of Sir C. Hubert Parry and Sir Charles Villiers Stanford. The following generation, including the Scottish composer Hamish MacCunn (1868–1916), built on the foundations laid by Parry and Stanford and served as the bridge to the vocal music of Ralph Vaughan Williams, Sir Edward Elgar, Ivor Gurney, John Ireland, and ultimately Benjamin Britten. Though best known for his Scottish-influenced compositions, MacCunn composed over 100 songs that, free from national constraints, are some of the most refined and sophisticated examples of his music. Almost no modern editions of MacCunn’s song exist, though many were published during the composer’s lifetime. The current two-part edition presents the composer’s 102 extant songs. Part 1 contains 53 individual songs; part 2 presents the songs that were first published as sets.




Liszt in Context


Book Description

Liszt in Context explores the political, social, philosophical and professional currents that surrounded Franz Liszt and illuminates the competing forces that influenced his music. Liszt was immersed in the religious, political and cultural debates of his day, and moved between institutions, places, and social circles with ease. All of this makes for a rich contextual tapestry against which Liszt composed some of the most iconic, popular, and also contentious music of the nineteenth century. His significance and astonishing reach cannot be over-stated, and his presence in nineteenth-century European culture, and his continuing influence into the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, are overwhelming. The focus on context, reception, and legacy that this volume provides reveals the multifaceted nature of Liszt's impact during his lifetime and beyond.




German-Jewish Organ Music


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March Music Notes


Book Description

This book focuses on popular marches from the last three centuries, including biographical information on composers, arrangements, dates of compostion, publishing and recording information for each march, as well as performance grade or level. Arranged alphabetically by composer, the contributions to march music were collected from all over the world.