Our new music : leading composers in Europe and America / [by] Aaron Copland.

Author/creator Copland, Aaron
Format Book
Publication InfoNew York ; London : Whittlesey house, McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc., ©1941.
Descriptionxiv, 305 pages : illustrations (music) ; 21 cm
Subjects

Contents Survey of contemporary European composers. The argument -- Preliminaries -- The background - late nineteenth century. Nationalism ; Moussorgsky's [Mussorgsky's] realism ; The impressionism of Debussy ; The late Romantics: Strauss, Mahler, Scriabin, Faure, Sibelius -- The middle ground - before 1914. Schoenberg's expressionism ; Stravinsky's dynamism ; Bela Bartok -- The foreground - since 1918. Music after the first World War ; Ravel and Roussel ; Satie and "Les six" ; The lyricism of Milhaud ; The jazz interlude ; The neoclassic movement ; The neoclassic influence ; The present day -- Coda -- Composers in America. Composers without a halo -- New music in the U. S. A. -- Personalities. The Ives case ; Roy Harris ; Sessions and Piston ; Thomson and Blitzstein -- Composer from Mexico: Carlos Chavez -- Composer from Brooklyn: an autobiographical sketch -- New musical media. The composer and radio -- The world of the phonograph -- Music in the films.
Abstract Many music lovers feel that they cannot appreciate modern music, and even those who like to listen to it often find it difficult to evaluate. Why does it almost always, at first hearing, sound so disturbing? Why does it appear to be lacking in melody (unlike the masterpieces of the 19th century)? Is it always complex and formidable? What aims and ideas have the composers in mind? Aaron Copland attempts to answer these questions. He shows first of all how contemporary music grew naturally out of the work of such masters as Moussorgsky and Debussy, through Schoenberg, Stravinsky, Bartok, Hindemith, to the work of younger Americans like Roy Harris, Virgil Thomson, and Marc Blitzstein. The book offers a brilliant panorama of fifty years of new music. It also provides an introduction to the formative ideas of the period, and a survey of recent and current trends. Then the author discusses individually certain leading composers of Europe and America. A special section is devoted to six outstanding Americans, together with a discussion of Carlos Chavez and a review of certain aspects of Mr. Copland's own career as a composer. The book closes with a consideration of developments in new musical media--the radio, the phonograph, the movies. Such a book gives the reader not only a better understanding of new music but a basis for selecting what is good, and increased pleasure in listening.
General note"A selected list of phonograph recordings": pages 277-290.
LCCN 41019296

Availability

Library Location Call Number Status Item Actions
Music Closed Stacks - Ask at Circulation Desk ML197.C76 O8 ✔ Available Place Hold