Music Preferred. Essays in Musicology, Cultural History and Analysis in Honour of Harry White

Inhaltsverzeichnis

CONTENTS

NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS

FOREWORD by Gerard Gillen (Maynooth University and Titular
Organist, St. Mary’s Pro-Cathedral)

INTRODUCTION by Lorraine Byrne Bodley (Maynooth University)
and Robin Elliott (University of Toronto)

PART ONE: THE MUSICAL BAROQUE

Julian Horton (Durham University): J. S. Bach’s Fugue in C sharp minor,
Well-Tempered Clavier, Book I and the Autonomy of the Musical Work

Lorenz Welker (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Munich):
Johann Joseph Fux’s Sonata à 4 in G (K. 347): Further Considerations on its Source, Style, Context and Authorship

Tassilo Erhardt (Liverpool Hope University): Johann Joseph Fux’
Church Music in its Spiritual and Liturgical Contexts

Jen-yen Chen (National Taiwan University):
The Musical Baroque in China: Interactions and Conf licts

Denis Collins (The University of Queensland, Australia):
Canon in Baroque Italy: Paolo Agostini’s Collections of Masses, Motets and Counterpoints from 1627

PART TWO: MUSIC IN IRELAND

Kerry Houston (DIT Conservatory of Music and Drama):
John Mathews: A Specimen of Georgian Ignorance?

Ita Beausang (DIT Conservatory of Music and Drama): There is a calm
for those who weep: William Shore’s New Edition of a Chorale by John [sic] Sebastian Bach

Axel Klein (Frankfurt): “No, Sir, the Irish are not musical”:
Some Historic (?) Debates on Irish Musicality

Adrian Scahill (Maynooth University): “That vulgar strummer”:
The Piano and Traditional Music in the Gaelic Revival

Maria McHale (DIT Conservatory of Music and Drama):
“Hopes for regeneration”: Opera in Revivalist Dublin, 1900–1916

Karol Mullaney-Dignam (University of Limerick):
“What do we mean by Irish music?” The Politics of State-Sponsored Music Publication in Independent Ireland

Ruth Stanley (Cork Institute of Technology): “Jazzing the soul of the
Nation away”: The Hidden History of Jazz in Ireland and Northern Ireland During the Interwar Years

Gearóid Ó hAllmhuráin (Concordia University Montreal): Sonic Icon,
Music Pilgrimage: Creating an Irish World Music Capital

Méabh Ní Fhuartháin (NUI Galway): “In the mood for dancing”:
Emigrant, Pop and Female

Gareth Cox (Mary Immaculate College,University of Limerick):
Aloys Fleischmann’s Games (1990)

Denise Neary (Royal Irish Academy of Music): The Development of
Music Performance as Artistic Research in Ireland

Michael Murphy (Mary Immaculate College, University of Limerick):
“Irish” Musicology and Musicology in Ireland: Grattan Flood,
Bewerunge, Harrison, White

PART THREE: MUSIC AND LITERATURE

Declan Kiberd (University of Notre Dame): The New Policeman

Gerry Smyth (Liverpool John Moores University):
Moore, Wagner, Joyce: Evelyn Innes and the Irish Wagnerian Novel

John O’Flynn (Dublin City University): Alex North, James Joyce,
and John Huston’s The Dead (1987)

Patrick Zuk (Durham University): L’ami inconnu: Nataliya Esposito and
Ivan Bunin

PART FOUR: AUSTRO-GERMANIC TRADITIONS

Michael Hüttler (Don Juan Archiv, Vienna): Hof- and Domkapellmeister
Johann Joseph Friebert (1724–1799) and his Singspiele

Anne Hyland (University of Manchester): Tautology or Teleology?
Reconsidering Repetition and Difference in Two Schubertian Symphonic First Movements

Susan Youens (University of Notre Dame): Of Anthropophagy,
the Abolitionist Movement, and Brahms: An unlikely Conjunction

Shane McMahon (UCD Humanities Institute): The Moth-Eaten Musical
Brocade: Narrative and the Limits of the Musical Imagination

David Cooper (University of Leeds): Die zweite Heimat: Musical Personae in a Second Home

Glenn Stanley (University of Connecticut): Brechtian Fidelio
Performances in West Germany: 1968 to the New Millennium

Nicole Grimes (University of California, Irvine): Brahms as a Vanishing
Point in the music of Wolfgang Rihm: Reflections on Klavierstück Nr. 6

PART FIVE: MUSIC IN BRITAIN

Pauline Graham (Griffith College): Intimations of Eternity in the Creeds
from William Byrd’s Five-Voice Mass and Great Service

John Cunningham (Bangor University): “An Irishman in an opera!”:
Music and Nationalism on the London Stage in the Mid–1770s

Jeremy Dibble (Durham University): Canon Thomas Hudson, Clergyman
Musician, Cambridge Don and the Hovingham ‘Experiment’

William A. Everett (University of Missouri – Kansas City):
The Great War, Propaganda, and Orientalist Musical Theatre: The Twin Histories of Katinka and Chu Chin Chow

Richard Aldous (Bard College): “Flash Harry”: Sir Malcolm Sargent
and the Progress of Music in England

PART SIX: MUSIC HISTORIES WORLDWIDE

Philip V. Bohlman (University of Chicago): Worlds Apart:
Resounding Selves and Others on Islands of Music History

Ivano Cavallini (University of Palermo): A Counter-Reformation
Reaction to Slovenian and Croatian Protestantism:
The Symbol of St. Athanasius in a Creed of 1624

Stanislav Tuksar (University of Zagreb): Musical Prints from c.1750–1815
in the Dubrovnik Franciscan Music Collection (HR-Dsmb)

Vjera Katalinic (Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Zagreb):
Routes of Travels and Points of Encounters Observed Through Musical
Borrowings: The Case of Giovanni Giornovichi/Ivan Jarnovic,
an 18th-Century Itinerant Violin Virtuoso

Jan Smaczny (Queen’s University Belfast): Antonín Dvorák in the Salon:
A Composer Emerges from the Shadows

Jaime Jones (University College Dublin): Singing the Way:
Music as Pilgrimage in Maharashtra

PART SEVEN: MUSIC AND POETRY

John Buckley (Dublin City University): A Setting of Harry White’s
Sonnet Bardolino from Polite Forms (2012) for Baritone and Piano

AFTERWORD by Iain Fenlon (King’s College Cambridge)

HARRY WHITE: LIST OF PUBLICATIONS

Music Preferred. Essays in Musicology, Cultural History and Analysis in Honour of Harry White

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Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

28.05.2018

Herausgeber

Lorraine Byrne Bodley

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Hollitzer Wissenschaftsverlag

Seitenzahl

784

Beschreibung

Details

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

28.05.2018

Herausgeber

Lorraine Byrne Bodley

Verlag

Hollitzer Wissenschaftsverlag

Seitenzahl

784

Maße (L/B/H)

24,6/17,4/4,9 cm

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  • Music Preferred. Essays in Musicology, Cultural History and Analysis in Honour of Harry White
  • CONTENTS

    NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS

    FOREWORD by Gerard Gillen (Maynooth University and Titular
    Organist, St. Mary’s Pro-Cathedral)

    INTRODUCTION by Lorraine Byrne Bodley (Maynooth University)
    and Robin Elliott (University of Toronto)

    PART ONE: THE MUSICAL BAROQUE

    Julian Horton (Durham University): J. S. Bach’s Fugue in C sharp minor,
    Well-Tempered Clavier, Book I and the Autonomy of the Musical Work

    Lorenz Welker (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Munich):
    Johann Joseph Fux’s Sonata à 4 in G (K. 347): Further Considerations on its Source, Style, Context and Authorship

    Tassilo Erhardt (Liverpool Hope University): Johann Joseph Fux’
    Church Music in its Spiritual and Liturgical Contexts

    Jen-yen Chen (National Taiwan University):
    The Musical Baroque in China: Interactions and Conf licts

    Denis Collins (The University of Queensland, Australia):
    Canon in Baroque Italy: Paolo Agostini’s Collections of Masses, Motets and Counterpoints from 1627

    PART TWO: MUSIC IN IRELAND

    Kerry Houston (DIT Conservatory of Music and Drama):
    John Mathews: A Specimen of Georgian Ignorance?

    Ita Beausang (DIT Conservatory of Music and Drama): There is a calm
    for those who weep: William Shore’s New Edition of a Chorale by John [sic] Sebastian Bach

    Axel Klein (Frankfurt): “No, Sir, the Irish are not musical”:
    Some Historic (?) Debates on Irish Musicality

    Adrian Scahill (Maynooth University): “That vulgar strummer”:
    The Piano and Traditional Music in the Gaelic Revival

    Maria McHale (DIT Conservatory of Music and Drama):
    “Hopes for regeneration”: Opera in Revivalist Dublin, 1900–1916

    Karol Mullaney-Dignam (University of Limerick):
    “What do we mean by Irish music?” The Politics of State-Sponsored Music Publication in Independent Ireland

    Ruth Stanley (Cork Institute of Technology): “Jazzing the soul of the
    Nation away”: The Hidden History of Jazz in Ireland and Northern Ireland During the Interwar Years

    Gearóid Ó hAllmhuráin (Concordia University Montreal): Sonic Icon,
    Music Pilgrimage: Creating an Irish World Music Capital

    Méabh Ní Fhuartháin (NUI Galway): “In the mood for dancing”:
    Emigrant, Pop and Female

    Gareth Cox (Mary Immaculate College,University of Limerick):
    Aloys Fleischmann’s Games (1990)

    Denise Neary (Royal Irish Academy of Music): The Development of
    Music Performance as Artistic Research in Ireland

    Michael Murphy (Mary Immaculate College, University of Limerick):
    “Irish” Musicology and Musicology in Ireland: Grattan Flood,
    Bewerunge, Harrison, White

    PART THREE: MUSIC AND LITERATURE

    Declan Kiberd (University of Notre Dame): The New Policeman

    Gerry Smyth (Liverpool John Moores University):
    Moore, Wagner, Joyce: Evelyn Innes and the Irish Wagnerian Novel

    John O’Flynn (Dublin City University): Alex North, James Joyce,
    and John Huston’s The Dead (1987)

    Patrick Zuk (Durham University): L’ami inconnu: Nataliya Esposito and
    Ivan Bunin

    PART FOUR: AUSTRO-GERMANIC TRADITIONS

    Michael Hüttler (Don Juan Archiv, Vienna): Hof- and Domkapellmeister
    Johann Joseph Friebert (1724–1799) and his Singspiele

    Anne Hyland (University of Manchester): Tautology or Teleology?
    Reconsidering Repetition and Difference in Two Schubertian Symphonic First Movements

    Susan Youens (University of Notre Dame): Of Anthropophagy,
    the Abolitionist Movement, and Brahms: An unlikely Conjunction

    Shane McMahon (UCD Humanities Institute): The Moth-Eaten Musical
    Brocade: Narrative and the Limits of the Musical Imagination

    David Cooper (University of Leeds): Die zweite Heimat: Musical Personae in a Second Home

    Glenn Stanley (University of Connecticut): Brechtian Fidelio
    Performances in West Germany: 1968 to the New Millennium

    Nicole Grimes (University of California, Irvine): Brahms as a Vanishing
    Point in the music of Wolfgang Rihm: Reflections on Klavierstück Nr. 6

    PART FIVE: MUSIC IN BRITAIN

    Pauline Graham (Griffith College): Intimations of Eternity in the Creeds
    from William Byrd’s Five-Voice Mass and Great Service

    John Cunningham (Bangor University): “An Irishman in an opera!”:
    Music and Nationalism on the London Stage in the Mid–1770s

    Jeremy Dibble (Durham University): Canon Thomas Hudson, Clergyman
    Musician, Cambridge Don and the Hovingham ‘Experiment’

    William A. Everett (University of Missouri – Kansas City):
    The Great War, Propaganda, and Orientalist Musical Theatre: The Twin Histories of Katinka and Chu Chin Chow

    Richard Aldous (Bard College): “Flash Harry”: Sir Malcolm Sargent
    and the Progress of Music in England

    PART SIX: MUSIC HISTORIES WORLDWIDE

    Philip V. Bohlman (University of Chicago): Worlds Apart:
    Resounding Selves and Others on Islands of Music History

    Ivano Cavallini (University of Palermo): A Counter-Reformation
    Reaction to Slovenian and Croatian Protestantism:
    The Symbol of St. Athanasius in a Creed of 1624

    Stanislav Tuksar (University of Zagreb): Musical Prints from c.1750–1815
    in the Dubrovnik Franciscan Music Collection (HR-Dsmb)

    Vjera Katalinic (Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Zagreb):
    Routes of Travels and Points of Encounters Observed Through Musical
    Borrowings: The Case of Giovanni Giornovichi/Ivan Jarnovic,
    an 18th-Century Itinerant Violin Virtuoso

    Jan Smaczny (Queen’s University Belfast): Antonín Dvorák in the Salon:
    A Composer Emerges from the Shadows

    Jaime Jones (University College Dublin): Singing the Way:
    Music as Pilgrimage in Maharashtra

    PART SEVEN: MUSIC AND POETRY

    John Buckley (Dublin City University): A Setting of Harry White’s
    Sonnet Bardolino from Polite Forms (2012) for Baritone and Piano

    AFTERWORD by Iain Fenlon (King’s College Cambridge)

    HARRY WHITE: LIST OF PUBLICATIONS