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    July to September 2007

   
Edited by Philip Reed, Mervyn Cooke and Donald Mitchell
Published in association with The Britten-Pears Foundation.


The fourth volume of this acclaimed edition of Britten's letters covers the composition of such key works as Gloriana, The Turn of the Screw and The Prince of the Pagodas; it also charts his growing stature in the European musical establishment; the world trip undertaken by Britten and Pears and the influence of the music and cultures of the Far East on Britten's compositional techniques.

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Stephanie D. Vial

Practical suggestions, and documentary evidence, for performers wishing to understand the gestures and nuances embedded in eighteenth-century musical notation.

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Hugh Macdonald

Macdonald, world-renowned authority on nineteenth-century music, here draws together many of his richest essays on music from Beethoven's time into the early twentieth century. The essays are revised and updated, and some are printed in English for the first time.

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Edited by Barbara L Kelly

New, insightful essays from musicologists, historians, art historians, and literary scholars reconsider the relationship of Debussy, Gauguin, Zola, and other great French creative artists to cultural and political trends during the Third Republic.

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Suzanne Cole

A survey of the huge importance of Thomas Tallis, the `Father of Church Music', on Victorian musical life. This book examines in detail the reception of two works that lie at the stylistic extremes of his output: Spem in alium, revived in the 1830s, though generally not greatly admired, and the Responses, which were very popular.

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Edited by Peter Bloom

New studies of the great French composer by Jacques Barzun, David Cairns, Joël-Marie Fauquet, Hugh Macdonald, Julian Rushton, and other prominent experts.

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David Gramit (ed)

The first English-language book on Czerny, and the broadest survey of his activity in any language.

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Leo Black

Leo Black, a pupil of Rubbra at Oxford in the 1950s, here presents a sympathetic full-scale study of his symphonic works (the first for some fifteen years). A succinct biographical sketch throws light on legends about the BBC and Rubbra, as well as the vexed question of Rubbra’s mysticism. There are full programme notes on each symphony, with shorter accounts of important non-symphonic works, in particular a 'triptych' of concertos from the 1950s and major liturgical pieces.

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Jack Douthett et al (eds)

Essays in diatonic set theory, transformation theory, and neo-Riemannian theory -- the newest and most exciting fields in music theory today.

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Lorenzo Candelaria

The Rosary Cantoral is a rare and beautifully decorated manuscript of Latin plainchant for the Catholic Mass compiled in Toledo, Spain, around the year 1500. In an engaging and richly interdisciplinary essay, Lorenzo Candelaria approaches it as a cultural artifact, unlocking the secrets behind its images and music to reveal the social history and rituals of an elite brotherhood.

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with illustrations by William Scott
Hugh Wood
Edited by Christopher Wintle with an Introduction by Bayan Northcott


Ever since his early days, Hugh Wood has pursued a triple career as composer, teacher and writer. This selection of writings is in three parts and shows three aspects to his work. The first addresses his own experience; the second maps out the historical and cultural context for a number of orchestral and chamber works in a set of concert essays; and the third draws together several composer-vignettes from his recent reviews for the Times Literary Supplement. (Plumbago Books)

Available simultaneously in hardcover and paperback