Modernism and Popular Music

Modernism and Popular Music
Author: Ronald Schleifer
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 233
Release: 2014-05-14
Genre: Jazz
ISBN: 1139093134

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A study of the performance and composition of early twentieth-century popular music in the context of 'high' modernism.

Pop Art and Popular Music

Pop Art and Popular Music
Author: Melissa L. Mednicov
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 142
Release: 2018-06-14
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9781351187374

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This book offers an innovative and interdisciplinary approach to Pop art scholarship through a recuperation of popular music into art historical understandings of the movement. Jukebox modernism is a procedure by which Pop artists used popular music within their works to disrupt decorous modernism during the sixties. Artists, including Peter Blake, Pauline Boty, James Rosenquist, and Andy Warhol, respond to popular music for reasons such as its emotional connectivity, issues of fandom and identity, and the pleasures and problems of looking and listening to an artwork. When we both look at and listen to Pop art, essential aspects of Pop’s history that have been neglected—its sounds, its women, its queerness, and its black subjects—come into focus.

The Routledge Research Companion to Modernism in Music

The Routledge Research Companion to Modernism in Music
Author: Björn Heile,Charles Wilson
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 518
Release: 2018-10-29
Genre: Music
ISBN: 9781317042457

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Modernism in music still arouses passions and is riven by controversies. Taking root in the early decades of the twentieth century, it achieved ideological dominance for almost three decades following the Second World War, before becoming the object of widespread critique in the last two decades of the century, both from critics and composers of a postmodern persuasion and from prominent scholars associated with the ‘new musicology’. Yet these critiques have failed to dampen its ongoing resilience. The picture of modernism has considerably broadened and diversified, and has remained a pivotal focus of debate well into the twenty-first century. This Research Companion does not seek to limit what musical modernism might be. At the same time, it resists any dilution of the term that would see its indiscriminate application to practically any and all music of a certain period. In addition to addressing issues already well established in modernist studies such as aesthetics, history, institutions, place, diaspora, cosmopolitanism, production and performance, communication technologies and the interface with postmodernism, this volume also explores topics that are less established; among them: modernism and affect, modernism and comedy, modernism versus the ‘contemporary’, and the crucial distinction between modernism in popular culture and a ‘popular modernism’, a modernism of the people. In doing so, this text seeks to define modernism in music by probing its margins as much as by restating its supposed essence.

Modernism and Popular Music

Modernism and Popular Music
Author: Ronald Schleifer
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 255
Release: 2011-05-26
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781139497473

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Traditionally, ideas about twentieth-century 'modernism' - whether focused on literature, music or the visual arts - have made a distinction between 'high' art and the 'popular' arts of best-selling fiction, jazz and other forms of popular music, and commercial art of one form or another. In Modernism and Popular Music, Ronald Schleifer instead shows how the music of George and Ira Gershwin, Cole Porter, Thomas 'Fats' Waller and Billie Holiday can be considered as artistic expressions equal to those of the traditional high art practices in music and literature. Combining detailed attention to the language and aesthetics of popular music with an examination of its early twentieth-century performance and dissemination through the new technologies of the radio and phonograph, Schleifer explores the 'popularity' of popular music in order to reconsider received and seeming self-evident truths about the differences between high art and popular art and, indeed, about twentieth-century modernism altogether.

The Last Post

The Last Post
Author: Simon Shaw-Miller
Publsiher: Manchester University Press
Total Pages: 208
Release: 1993
Genre: Music
ISBN: 0719036097

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Modernism and Music

Modernism and Music
Author: Daniel Albright
Publsiher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 446
Release: 2004-02-03
Genre: Music
ISBN: 0226012662

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If in earlier eras music may have seemed slow to respond to advances in other artistic media, during the modernist age it asserted itself in the vanguard. Modernism and Music provides a rich selection of texts on this moment, some translated into English for the first time. It offers not only important statements by composers and critics, but also musical speculations by poets, novelists, philosophers, and others-all of which combine with Daniel Albright's extensive, interlinked commentary to place modernist music in the full context of intellectual and cultural history.

Modernism Music and the Politics of Aesthetics

Modernism  Music and the Politics of Aesthetics
Author: Gemma Moss
Publsiher: EUP
Total Pages: 280
Release: 2023-02-18
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1474429912

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Using an approach to music informed by T. W. Adorno, this book examines the real-world, political significance of seemingly abstracted things like musical and literary forms. Re-assessing music in James Joyce, Ezra Pound and Sylvia Townsend Warner, this book re-shapes temporal, aesthetic and political understandings of modernism, by arguing that music plays a crucial role in ongoing attempts to investigate language, rational thought and ideology using aesthetic forms.

Essays on Music and Language in Modernist Literature

Essays on Music and Language in Modernist Literature
Author: Katherine O'Callaghan
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 296
Release: 2018-01-12
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781351865883

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This volume explores the role of music as a source of inspiration and provocation for modernist writers. In its consideration of modernist literature within a broad political, postcolonial, and internationalist context, this book is an important intervention in the growing field of Words and Music studies. It expands the existing critical debate to include lesser-known writers alongside Joyce, Woolf, and Beckett, a wide-ranging definition of modernism, and the influence of contemporary music on modernist writers. From the rhythm of Tagore’s poetry to the influence of jazz improvisation, the tonality of traditional Irish music to the operas of Wagner, these essays reframe our sense of how music inspired Literary Modernism. Exploring the points at which the art forms of music and literature collide, repel, and combine, contributors draw on their deep musical knowledge to produce close readings of prose, poetry, and drama, confronting the concept of what makes writing "musical." In doing so, they uncover commonalities: modernist writers pursue simultaneity and polyphony, evolve the leitmotif for literary purposes, and adapt the formal innovations of twentieth-century music. The essays explore whether it is possible for literature to achieve that unity of form and subject which music enjoys, and whether literary texts can resist paraphrase, can be simply themselves. This book demonstrates how attention to the role of music in text in turn illuminates the manner in which we read literature.