Resultaten voor 'tanya kevorkian'
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Music and Urban Life in Baroque Germany
"A truly exceptional book. Kevorkian has produced a rich, lively, readable history that extends and upends our knowledge of this period. This is a very important contribution to the study of music and society in Germany, at a time when the medieval and modern intersected and one can see the old world still functioning and a new one coming into being."— Celia Applegate, Vanderbilt University, author of The Necessity of Music: Variations on a German Theme"Grounded in solid and extensive archival research, Music and Urban Life in Baroque Germany examines the myriad ways in which music was embedded in the everyday lives of early modern townspeople. From taverns and town halls to churches and guard towers, from weddings and funerals to street fairs and processions, Tanya Kevorkian's fascinating study shows how music could both connect and divide urban communities. Musicologists and social historians alike will profit from her careful and revealing exploration of musical culture in five German cities."— James Van Horn Melton, Emory University, Author of The Rise of the Public in Enlightenment Europe "Tanya Kevorkian's meticulous yet readable social history of the urban soundscapes in Augsburg, Erfurt, Leipzig, Munich, and other German towns allows us to imagine what Bach, Telemann, and their contemporaries heard on a daily basis – a sonic tapestry that included not just cantatas in church, instrumental pieces at concerts, and dances in taverns, but also night watchmen's songs, street vendors' cries, tower guards' brass fanfares and hymns, and postal coachmen's horn calls. Drawing on a wealth of previously overlooked documents, Kevorkian deftly outlines the complexities and conflicts of musicians' daily lives: the physical rigors faced by tower guards, the often fraught business of weddings, so crucial to the livelihoods of town musicians and their lower-status competitors, and the controversial street-singing of schoolboys, university students, and beggars. Thanks to this stimulating book, we hear baroque Germany in new and deeper ways."— Steven D. Zohn, Temple University, Author of Music for a Mixed Taste: Style, Genre, and Meaning in Telemann's Instrumental Works "This is a social history that is alive with quotidian detail and buzzes with the daily experiences of what feels to be a not-so-distant past. The prose in this accessible volume belies the immense primary-source research that informs it. . . . [A] rich picture of baroque German life."—BACH: Journal of the Riemenschneider Bach Institute"Embraces a variety of approaches to urban history and musicology, which let Kevorkian tell a lively story about overlooked professions, vividly reconstructing aspects of everyday life and music making in Bach's age."—Bach Notes"Music and Urban Life in Baroque Germany documents in wonderful detail how the various layers of society during this period (mostly after the Thirty Years War until ca. 1750) and geographical area (data gleaned mainly from the cities of Augsburg, Munich, Erfurt, Gotha, and Leipzig) were saturated with musical and nonmusical sound... As the reader traverses each chapter, there begins to form an imaginary mental picture very similar to an immense and complex spider web, wherein the thousands of musical interactions form points, each of which are connected by multiple strands to other nodes... I thoroughly enjoyed this eminently readable study."—H-German"Fascinating and finely grained . . . Underlying the lucid prose of Kevorkian’s account is a rich fabric of painstakingly thorough archival research and a very broad array of secondary literature. She reads the data with a particularly compassionate eye . . . Kevorkian’s book is a valuable backdrop that provides new depth and dimensionality to our understanding of the music of Baroque Germany."—Early Music America "Kevorkian explores the sonic world of the early modern German city as a means of understanding music in and as a reflection of social life of the time. . . Curiously, the picture of musical life—in the cities in which Bach, his multigenerational family of town and court musicians, and their contemporaries lived and worked—offers abundant demonstration of its remoteness from lived experiences today."—Notes "[A] learned and provocative new book."—Journal of Modern History" [A] vigorously researched, resonantly detailed, and often tuneful book . . . often entertaining and always thought-provoking."—Austrian History Yearbook "Persuasively combines the methods of sound studies with traditional social and institution history approaches . . . Kevorkian demonstrates in exemplary fashion the spaces of interaction of urban musicians in a microhistorical study that never loses sight of larger and interdisciplinary connections."—Zeitschrift für Historische Forschung
€ 34,50 -
Music and Urban Life in Baroque Germany
Challenging ideas of ‘elite’ and ‘popular’ culture, Tanya Kevorkian examines five central and southern German towns - Augsburg, Munich, Erfurt, Gotha, and Leipzig - to reconstruct a vibrant urban musical culture held in common by townspeople of all ranks.
€ 55,50 -
Compositional Choices and Meaning in the Vocal Music of J. S. Bach
Compositional Choices and Meaning in the Vocal Music of J. S. Bach collects seventeen essays by leading Bach scholars. The essays explore Bach’s sacred vocal music from the perspectives of historical theology, music analysis, the study of parody procedures, and reception history.
€ 55,50 -
Bach's Changing World:
Voices in the CommunityBach's Changing World is a study of popular culture in the community in which Bach spent the last, the longest, and the most productive part of his life: the Leipzig middle-class.
€ 131,95 -
Compositional Choices and Meaning in the Vocal Music of J. S. Bach
Compositional Choices and Meaning in the Vocal Music of J. S. Bach collects seventeen essays by leading Bach scholars. The essays explore Bach’s sacred vocal music from the perspectives of historical theology, music analysis, the study of parody procedures, and reception history.
€ 156,50 -
Baroque Piety: Religion, Society, and Music in Leipzig, 1650-1750
Prize: Winner of the 2008 William H. Scheide Prize of the American Bach Society Shortlisted for the AMS Lewis Lockwood Award 2008. Through personal accounts, Kevorkian paints a detailed and intimate picture of religious activity across the strata of civic society. The story of Leipzig's public religious culture to 1750 emerges as one of great diversity and flux in a period of relative peace and economic prosperity.... Readers from social, political, and religious history should not be put off by the prominence of music in the title, and indeed, this review. ...a valuable social history. Music, in Kevorkian's book, as it was in Leipzig society, is but one thread in the rich fabric of public pious culture. H-German In sum, Kevorkian has done important research in specific areas such as pewholding, consistory and city council records, and Pietist correspondence that enrich our understanding of religious affairs in Leipzig in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries... it is a significant addition to the scholarly literature in the field. Journal of the American Musicological Society ... this book provides a highly stimulating historical resource that will undoubtedly inflect many musical studies of Bach and his predecessors over the coming years. Early Music A valuable contribution to Ashgate's growing catalogue of interdisciplinary studies... Baroque Piety provides new insight into how we consider the religious arena in early modern Europe. Renaissance Quarterly Music forms only one strand of Kevorkian‘s interdisciplinary study, yet by considering Bach‘s work within the religious life of Leipzig, she offers a model of how music can be integrated within social history. ... [Kevorkian's] book is not only a sure-footed account of the religious sphere in which Bach worked, it should also stimulate new directions in research on eighteenth-century German music. Eighteenth-Century Music Having a broad sweep of Kevorkian
€ 82,95 -
Baroque Piety: Religion, Society, and Music in Leipzig, 1650-1750
Drawing upon an array of sources from archives in Leipzig, Dresden and Halle, this work illuminates culture in Leipzig before and during J S Bach's time spent in the city. It shows that high Baroque culture emerged through a combination of traditional frameworks and practices, and an infusion of change that set in from around 1680.
€ 221,95