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This book provides a multifaceted view on the relation between the old and the new in music, between tradition and innovation. This is a much-debated issue, generating various ideas and theories, which rarely come to unanimous conclusions. Therefore, the book offers diverse perspectives on topics such as national identities, narrative strategies, the question of musical performance and musical meaning. Alongside themes of general interest, such as classical repertoire, the music of well-established composers and musical topics, the chapters of the book also touch on specific, but equally interesting subjects, like Brazilian traditions, Serbian and Romanian composers and the lullaby. While the book is mostly addressed to researchers, it can also be recommended to students in musicology, ethnomusicology, musical performance, and musical semiotics.
Brings together both top scholars as promising young scholar, on the much-debated issue of tradition Covers a wide area of subjects, from the mainstream Viennese Classical music to national identities and traditions Addresses numerous issues of current concerns since the subject of music
Auteur
Oana Andreica is an associate professor at the Department of Musicology of the "Gheorghe Dima" National Music Academy in Cluj-Napoca, Romania, where she teaches Musicology and Musical Semiotics, as well as musical secretary of the Transylvania State Philharmonic. She was engaged in a postdoctoral project, conducting research on musical semiotics and Costin Miereanu's music. She regularly participates in national and international musicology conferences and her list of publications comprises books, studies, articles, interviews, and chronicles. In 2012, she published the monograph Art i abis. Cazul Mahler (Art and Abyss. The Mahler Case) and in 2020 the book entitled Ghid (incomplet) de concert [(Uncomplete) Concert Guide]. She is also a co-editor of the volume Readings in Numanities, published by Springer in 2018.
Contenu
Preface.- Part 1: Chapter 1. What is 'Modern'? How to renew musical heritages or the innovators and reformers of music history (Eero Tarasti).- Chapter 2. Paradigms of European music of the 18th-20th Centuries and Stravinsky's innovations (Konstantin Zenkin).- Chapter 3. Mémoire et invariants dans les uvres de la musique occidentale (L'exemple de la berceuse) (Márta Grabócz).- Chapter 4. The heritage prior to killing the radio star: How modern music videos were shaped by their predecessors (Dario Martinelli).- Part 2: Chapter 5. Music and affect: Self, sound embodiment, and the music of Feldman and Xenakis (Paulo C. Chagas).- Chapter 6. Music as ongoing knowledge construction: From sound to meaning (Mark Reybrouck).- Chapter 7. Reconsideration of musical gesture as a musical event in a narrative discourse (Takemi Sosa).- Chapter 8. A 'Humorous' narrative archetype in the music of the viennese classics as a subversive device (Joan Grimalt).- Part 3: Chapter 9. The performer between heritage and novelty: Apects of spatiality in performer's creativity.- (Juha Ojala).- Chapter 10. Adorno's ideas on Stravinsky's neoclassicism meet the pianist's work: Reflecting playing experience with Adorno's key concepts (Eveliina Sumelius-Lindblom).- Part 4: Chapter 11. Polyphonic personalities. The identity of a modern composer in the self-reflection of György Ligeti and Jonathan Harvey (Ewa Schreiber).- Chapter 12. Active and visual perception of 20th-century music: The mimetic hypothesis of Arnie Cox using the example of Arnold Schoenberg's Chamber Symphony, Op. 9 (Iwona Sowinska-Fruhtrunk).- Chapter 13. Moderate modernism and the socially acceptable paraphrase: Two late works by Serbian composer Stanojlo Rajii (Milo Bralovi).- Chapter 14. Between tradition and modernity, East and West Bartók's musicological reception and the narratives of Hungarian identity (Dániel Nagy).- Chapter 15. Forbidden messages. Romanian musician constantin Silvestri in the light of an existential semiotic approach (Elena Boanc).- Part 5: Chapter 16. The Epiphany Feast in Brazil: A semiotic perspective to the analysis of a living liturgic drama tradition (Ricardo Nogueira de Castro Monteiro).- Chapter 17. Song from overseas: Memory and nomadism of Fado (Heloísa de Duarte Valente).- Chapter 18. Uirapuru: The legendary enchanted bird by Heitor Villa-Lobos. An aesthetic confrontation along Stravinsky's Firebird and Sibelius's Tapiola (Rodrigo Felicissimo).