Music and the Sonorous Sublime in European Culture 1680 1880

Music and the Sonorous Sublime in European Culture  1680   1880
Author: Sarah Hibberd,Miranda Stanyon
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 323
Release: 2020-05-28
Genre: Music
ISBN: 9781108486590

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The first English language collection on the musical sublime. Reveals music's place at the forefront of this interdisciplinary aesthetic category.

Resounding the Sublime

Resounding the Sublime
Author: Miranda Eva Stanyon
Publsiher: University of Pennsylvania Press
Total Pages: 287
Release: 2021-05-07
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780812299564

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What does the sublime sound like? Harmonious, discordant, noisy, rustling, silent? Miranda Eva Stanyon rereads and resounds this crucial aesthetic category in English and German literatures of the long eighteenth century from a musical perspective and shows how sonorous sublimes lay at the heart of a central and transformative discourse. For Enlightenment and Romantic era listeners, the musical sublime represented a sonic encounter of the most extreme kind, one that tested what humans were capable of feeling, imagining, thinking, and therefore becoming. The sublime and music have not always sung from the same hymn sheet, Stanyon observes. She charts an antagonistic intimacy between the two, from the sublime's rise to prominence in the later seventeenth century, through the upheavals associated with Kant in the late eighteenth century, and their reverberations in the nineteenth. Offering readings of canonical texts by Longinus, Dryden, Burke, Klopstock, Herder, Coleridge, De Quincey, and others alongside lesser-known figures, she shows how the literary sublime was inextricable from musical culture, from folksongs and ballads to psalmody, polychoral sacred music, and opera. Deeply interdisciplinary, Resounding the Sublime draws literature into dialogue with sound studies, musicology, and intellectual and cultural history to offer new perspectives on the sublime as a phenomenon which crossed media, disciplines, and cultures. An interdisciplinary study of sound in history, the book recovers varieties of the sublime crucial for understanding both the period it covers and the genealogy of modern and postmodern aesthetic discourses. In resounding the sublime, Stanyon reveals a phenomenon which was always already resonant. The sublime emerges not only as the aesthetic of the violently powerful, a-rational, or unrepresentable, but as a variegated discourse with competing dissonant, harmonious, rustling, noisy, and silent strains, one in which music and sound illustrate deep divisions over issues of power, reason, and representation.

The Cambridge Companion to the Romantic Sublime

The Cambridge Companion to the Romantic Sublime
Author: Cian Duffy
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 299
Release: 2023-07-20
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781009032629

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This is the only collection of its kind to focus on one of the most important aspects of the cultural history of the Romantic period, its sources, and its afterlives. Multidisciplinary in approach, the volume examines the variety of areas of enquiry and genres of cultural productivity in which the sublime played a substantial role during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. With impressive international scope, this Companion considers the Romantic sublime in both European and American contexts and features essays by leading scholars from a range of national backgrounds and subject specialisms, including state-of-the-art perspectives in digital and environmental humanities. An accessible, wide-ranging, and thorough introduction, aimed at researchers, students, and general readers alike, and including extensive suggestions for further reading, The Cambridge Companion to the Romantic Sublime is the go-to book on the subject.

The Cambridge Companion to Music and Romanticism

The Cambridge Companion to Music and Romanticism
Author: Benedict Taylor
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 403
Release: 2021-08-26
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781108475433

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A stimulating new approach to understanding the relationship between music and culture in the long nineteenth century.

Berlioz and His World

Berlioz and His World
Author: Francesca Brittan,Sarah Hibberd
Publsiher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 356
Release: 2024-08-05
Genre: Music
ISBN: 9780226837659

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A collection of essays and short object lessons on the composer Hector Berlioz, published in collaboration with the Bard Music Festival. Hector Berlioz (1803–1869) has long been a difficult figure to place and interpret. Famously, in Richard Wagner’s estimation, he hovered as a “transient, marvelous exception,” a composer woefully and willfully isolated. In the assessment of German composer Ferdinand Hiller, he was a fleeting comet who “does not belong in our musical solar system,” the likes of whom would never be seen again. For his contemporaries, as for later critics, Berlioz was simply too strange—and too noisy, too loud, too German, too literary, too cavalier with genre and form, and too difficult to analyze. He was, in many ways, a composer without a world. Berlioz and His World takes a deep dive into the composer’s complex legacy, tracing lines between his musical and literary output and the scientific, sociological, technological, and political influences that shaped him. Comprising nine essays covering key facets of Berlioz’s contribution and six short “object lessons” meant as conversation starters, the book reveals Berlioz as a richly intersectional figure. His very difficulty, his tendency to straddle the worlds of composer, conductor, and critic, is revealed as a strength, inviting new lines of cross-disciplinary inquiry and a fresh look at his European and American reception.

Clara Schumann Studies

Clara Schumann Studies
Author: Joe Davies
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 329
Release: 2021-12-02
Genre: Music
ISBN: 9781108489843

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Develops a holistic and gender-aware understanding of Clara Schumann as pianist, composer and teacher in nineteenth-century Germany.

The Sound of the English Picturesque

The Sound of the English Picturesque
Author: Stephen Groves
Publsiher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 273
Release: 2023-12-04
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9781000985917

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Revealing the connections between the veneration of national landscape and eighteenth- century English vocal music, this study restores English music’s relationship with the picturesque. In the eighteenth century, the emerging taste for the picturesque was central to British aesthetics, as poets and painters gained popularity by glorifying the local landscape in works concurrent with the emergence of native countryside tourism. Yet English music was seldom discussed as a medium for conveying national scenic beauty. Stephen Groves explores this gap, and shows how secular song, the glee, and national theatre music expressed a uniquely English engagement with landscape. Using an interdisciplinary approach, Groves addresses the apparent ‘silence’ of the English picturesque. The book draws on analysis of the visualisations present in the texts of English vocal music, and their musical treatment, to demonstrate how local composers incorporated celebrations of landscape into their works. The final chapter shows that the English picturesque was a crucial influence on Joseph Haydn’s oratorio The Seasons. Suitable for anyone with an interest in eighteenth- century music, aesthetics, and the natural environment, this book will appeal to a wide range of specialists and non- specialists alike.

The Cambridge Companion to Women Composers

The Cambridge Companion to Women Composers
Author: Matthew Head,Susan Wollenberg
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 375
Release: 2024-05-30
Genre: Music
ISBN: 9781108489157

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Exploring a diverse, distinguished repertoire, and transcending the rhetoric of neglect, this book transforms understanding of women composers.