Essays in Musicology, Cultural History and Analysis in Honour of Harry White
E-Book, Englisch, 784 Seiten, Format (B × H): 170 mm x 240 mm
ISBN: 978-3-99012-402-4
Verlag: Hollitzer
Format: PDF
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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