Essays in Honor of John F. Ohl: A Compendium of American Musicology

Cover
Enrique Alberto Arias
Northwestern University Press, 2001 - 264 Seiten
A Compendium of American Musicology is a collection of thirteen fascinating essays in three fields of musicology: chant studies, music from the Renaissance to the Classic Era, and source studies from the Romantic and Postromantic periods. This collection by thirteen esteemed musicologists was compiled and edited in memory of John F. Ohl, whose career spanned study and work at Harvard, Fisk, and Northwestern Universities. He founded Northwestern's Department of Music in 1951.

Arranged chronologically by subject, the essays cover the history of Western music from the liturgical chants of the Middle Ages to the nineteenth-century symphony and the tonal innovations of the twentieth century. The collection also includes a biography of John F. Ohl, a bibliography of Ohl's publications, and an essay on Ohl by George Frederick Handel.

 

Ausgewählte Seiten

Inhalt

Provins Bibl Mun MS 12
3
Modal Practice
49
Studies in Music from the Renaissance
73
Northwestern Universitys SeventeenthCentury Manuscript
92
The Common Sense School and the Science of Music
122
Madness in Music and Theory
133
The String Trio Version of Haydns Princess Esterházy Sonatas
155
Source and Genre Studies in Romantic
177
The Germanic Program Symphony in the Nineteenth Century
195
Alban Berg and Mahlers Eighth Symphony
212
The Importation of Western Music to China at the Turn
229
Sleep SleepPerchance to Dream
241
Notes on Contributors
261
Urheberrecht

Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen

Autoren-Profil (2001)

Enrique Alberto Arias was an Associate Professor at DePaul University's School of New Learning and president of Ars Musica Chicago. He died in 2004.

Bibliografische Informationen