Romanticism (1830-1890)
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Romanticism (1830-1890)
(New Oxford history of music, v. 9)
Oxford University Press, 1990
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Note
Bibliography: p. [831]-904
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The New Oxford History of Music is complete
This latest and last volume:
* completes the set of The New Oxford History of Music in 10 volumes
* includes the whole span of western instrumental music and opera in the greater part of the nineteenth century
* is edited by one of the most respected scholars of nineteenth-century music
In March 1830 Goethe complained to Eckermann that `everybody talks now about Classicism and Romanticism - which no one thought of fifty years ago'. Romanticism - a concept more easily recognized than defined - was the prevailing spirit of the vast outpouring of music in the sixty years chronicled in this volume. The list of major composers treated either wholly or in part will serve as an indication of its scope: Chopin, Schumann, Mendelssohn, Liszt, Brahms, Berlioz, Donizetti, Verdi, Wagner,
Gounod, Bizet, Borodin, Mussorgsky, Tchaikovsky, Rimsky-Korsakov, Dvorak, Smetana, Faure, Wolf, Puccini, Bruckner, Mahler, Strauss, Cesar Franck, Debussy.
Contributors: Gerald Abraham, John Horton, David Charlton, David Kimbell, Siegfried Goslich, Nicholas Temperly, Willi Kahl, Arnold Whittall, Julian Budden, Robert Pascall, Leslie Orrey, David Tunley, Edward Garden, Rosemary Hunt, and John Clapham.
Table of Contents
- Part 1 New tendencies in orchestral music - 1830-1850, Gerald Abraham. Part 2 Chamber music - 1830-1850, John Horton. Part 3 Romantic opera - 1830-1850 - grand opera and opera comique, David Charlton, (Lecturer in Music, University of East Anglia)
- Italy opera, David Kimbell
- Germany, Siegfried Goslich
- Russia and Eastern Europe, Gerald Abraham
- Britain and the United States, Nicholas Temperley. Part 4 Romantic piano music - 1830-1850, Willi Kahl. Part 5 Wagner's later stage works, Arnold Whittall. Part 6 Opera - 1850-1890: Germany, Gerald Abraham
- France, David Charlton (Lecturer in Music, University of East Anglia)
- Italy, Julian Budden
- Russia and Eastern Europe, Gerald Abraham
- Britain and the United States, Nicholas Temperley. Part 7 The symphonic poem and kindred forms, Gerald Abraham. Part 8 Major instrumental forms - 1850-1890, Robert Pascall (Professor of Music, University of Nottingham). Part 9 Solo song: Germany, Leslie Orrey
- France, David Tunley (Professor of Music, University of western Australia)
- Russia, Edward Garden
- Poland, Rosemary Hunt
- Czechoslovakia, John Clapham
- Scandinavia, John Horton
- Britain and the United States, Nicholas Temperley
- Part 10 Choral music, Gerald Abraham.
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