Topic: Popular Culture / Music & Performing Arts

 
A Most Wondrous Babble
American Art Composers, Their Music, and the American Scene 1950-1985
Nicholas E. Tawa
000-0-00000-000-0

This eBook may be purchased through the following distributors:

 
Nicholas E. Tawa
ADD COPY 2009 ABC-CLIO

A Most Wondrous Babble

American Art Composers, Their Music, and the American Scene 1950-1985

Nicholas E. Tawa Nicholas E. Tawa


May 1987

Praeger

Series: Contributions to the Study of Music and Dance

Cover
Pages
Volumes
Size
Hardcover
297
1
 
ISBN
978-0-313-25692-9
Print in Stock
$126.95

add to cart

Tawa considers the musical and social ramifications influencing the American composer between 1950 and 1985. He draws information from composers, music reviewers, and from his own listening experiences. Tawa's common theme is the gulf between what the composer (or critic) says about the music and how the public experiences it. . . . More than 50 composers are considered. . . . Tawa . . . goes beyond biographical detail to help the reader to `understand the reasons for the deep abyss separating contemporary composer and listener'. Choice

The decades following World War II witnessed an explosion of musical creativity in America. Unfortunately, they also witnessed a widening abyss between the contemporary composer and his or her audience. Confusion on the part of the modern listener is an all-too-frequent phenomenon when he or she is confronted by the extraordinary profusion of contemporary musical styles. This useful volume is intended to relieve some of that confusion. Insightful commentaries and a highly readable text combine to focus on all contemporary musical styles from the most traditional to the most experimental in relation to modern American life. Taking the position that music is a transaction between creator/composer and listener, the author considers ways in which each faction may become more aware of the other's imperatives, thereby sponsoring a new and mutually meaningful music.
Preface
Postwar Turbulence and Change
The World of the Modern Composer
The Music of Serialism and Atonality
Musical Countercurrents
Modern Music, Visionary Connections
The Traditional Mainstream
Venturesome Composers of the Traditional Mainstream
Reconciliations
Discography of Works Referred to in Chapters 3 through 7
A Selective Bibliography of Works Consulted
Reviews
Tawa considers the musical and social ramifications influencing the American composer between 1950 and 1985. He draws information from composers, music reviewers, and from his own listening experiences. Tawa's common theme is the gulf between what the composer (or critic) says about the music and how the public experiences it. He looks at the artistic turmoil of post-WW II, electronic sound, serialism, atonality, ethnic sources, and the traditional mainstream and its more venturesome composers. In a final essay, `Reconciliations,' Tawa advises the composer to cease isolation, to reconsider the use and function of music, to once again achieve a sense of community with a society in which he expresses faith, while not spurning tradition. More than 50 composers are considered.... Tawa ... goes beyond biographical detail to help the reader `understand the reasons for the deep abyss separating contemporary composer and listener.' Extensive discography and selective bibliography. Devoid of actual analysis of compositional styles, the book is appropriate for upper-division and graduate students, and for general readers.—Choice