The Dawning of American Keyboard Music

Cover
Bloomsbury Academic, 19.10.1988 - 438 Seiten

Clark provides an extensive survey of the keyboard culture of the young American nation. Written in straightforward, accessible style, the volume covers the period 1787-1830. Clark's unusual organization of the music by genre . . . reveals the wide expanse of the early musical output. . . . This volume belongs in every academic library and on the shelves of all pianists interested in US national musical heritage. Clark's `overriding wish is that some of this music will be played and heard again.' This reviewer heartily concurs and applauds this book as a solid cornerstone upon which his wish may be built. Choice

... a thoroughly excellent piece of scholarship. Professor Clark has a truly encyclopedic command of the literature, analytical expertise, and a clear and engrossing prose style. The book captures one's interest quickly and never becomes slow or pedantic. American Organist

The Dawning of American Keyboard Music covers the subject very completely and it will be a standard reference tool for those who love early American music. American Music Teacher

This work concerns the rapid growth of keyboard composition in the United States from its beginnings in the 1760s until 1830. Nearly all of the more artistic compositions are described, focusing on those available in moderns editions and reprints; for the rest, there are over 200 examples from music extant only in their original sheet-music copies. The first part of the book is organized by genre, with chapters on the sonata, the rondo, variations, the medley, and battle music. Later chapters are devoted to organ music and to a detailed account of English and American pianoforte tutors, including the varying realizations of ornament signs. The work's formal chapter treats the Bohemian immigrant Anthony Philip Heinrich (1781-1861), whose avant garde compositions are still incomprehensible to many people. The volume concludes with a bibliography of literature on the subject and music editions and with indexes of names, titles, and subjects.

The specialized focus of this account supplements the more general histories of early American music. Citations are made to the standard bibliographies of early printed music; complete bibliographical descriptions, including library locations, are furnished for the rest. This volume will appeal to historians of American music and keyborad music and to keyboard performers.

Inhalt

Sonatas Rausch to Heinrich
1
Example
2
337
16
120
18
Heinrich La Buona Mattina 1st movement
27
122
30
Rondos Brown to Meineke
33
215
53
40
126
45
132
356
137
56
140
70
152
76
157
var 4 meas 22
172
3119
196

217a
62
232
75
234
79
A Variety of Variations
83
8
86
15
92
Heinrich La Buona Mattina 1st movement
94
Joseph Willson Henrys Cottage Maid
95
319
102
27
107
323
108
33
111
28
113
is blowing var 6 meas 16
117
35
120
338
122
119
200
A Potpourri of Medleys
203
63
207
47a
211
European and American Keyboard Battles
229
65
235
Organ Music Bremner to Zeuner
255
Pianoforte Tutors in England and America
271
Anthony Philip Heinrich
311
68
317
122
349
69
355
250
357
Bibliography
373
Modern and Reprint Editions of Music
379
Urheberrecht

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Autoren-Profil (1988)

J. BUNKER CLARK is Professor of Music History at the University of Kansas. He is the author of Transposition in Seventeenth Century English Organ Accompaniments and the Transposing Organ and the editor of Anthology of Early American Keyboard Music, 1787-1830 and Nathaniel Giles: Anthems. Mr. Clark has contributed articles to The New Grove Dictionary of American Music and to numerous journals, including Notes, Fontes Artis Musicae, Musica Disciplina, Music & Letters, and The American Organist. Currently he is also series editor of Detroit Studies in Music Bibliography and general editor for Harmonie Park Press.

Bibliografische Informationen