Tonality Since 1950
Tonality Since 1950 documents the debate surrounding one of the most basic technical and artistic resources of music in the later 20th century. The flourishing of tonality – a return to key, pitch center, and consonance – in recent decades has undermined received views of its disintegration or collapse ca. 1910, intensifying the discussion of music's acoustical-theoretical bases, and of its broader cultural and metaphysical meanings. While historians of 20th-century music have often marginalized tonal practices, the present volume offers a new emphasis on emergent historical continuities. Musicians as diverse as Hindemith, the Beatles, Reich, and Saariaho have approached tonality from many different angles: as a figure of nostalgic longing, or as a universal law; as a quoted artefact of music's sedimented stylistic past, or as a timeless harmonic resource. Essays by 15 leading researchers cover a wide repertoire of concert and pop/rock music composed in Europe and America over the past half-century.
ISBN: | 9783515115827 |
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Auflage: | 1 |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Seitenzahl: | 345 |
Produktart: | Gebunden |
Herausgeber: | Rupprecht, Philip Scheideler, Ullrich Wörner, Felix |
Verlag: | Franz Steiner Verlag |
Veröffentlicht: | 16.03.2017 |
Schlagworte: | 20. Jahrhundert Musikalische Analyse Musikalische Interpretation Musikgeschichte Musiktheorie Tonalität |