Home| All soft| Last soft| Your Orders| Customers opinion| Helpdesk| Cart

Program Search:


Shopping Cart:




*Note: Minimum order price: €20
We Recommend:
Redefining Hungarian Music from Liszt to Bartok PDF eBook €10 buy download

Redefining Hungarian Music from Liszt to Bartók by Lynn M. Hooker
2013 | ISBN: 0199739595 | English | 320 pages | PDF | 5 MB

Some of the most popular works of nineteenth-century music were labeled either "Hungarian" or "Gypsy" in style, including many of the best-known and least-respected of Liszt's compositions. In the early twentieth century, Béla Bartók and his colleagues questioned not only the Hungarianness but also the good taste of that style. Bartók argued that it should be discarded in favor of a national style based in the "genuine" folk music of the rural peasantry. Between the heyday of the nineteenth-century Hungarian-Gypsy style and its replacement by a new paradigm of "authentic" national style was a vigorous decades-long debate-one little known inside or outside Hungary-over what it meant to be Hungarian, European, and modern.

Redefining Hungarian Music from Liszt to Bartók traces the historical process that defined the conventions of Hungarian-Gypsy style. Author Lynn M. Hooker frames her study around the 1911 celebration of Liszt's centennial. In so doing, she analyzes Liszt's problematic role as a Hungarian-born composer and leader of Hungarian art music who spent most of his life outside of Hungary and questioned whether Hungary's national music was more the creation of Hungarians or Roma (Gypsies). The themes of race and nation that emerge in the discussion of Liszt are further developed in an analysis of discourse on Hungarian national music throughout the Hungarian press in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Showing how the "discovery" of "genuine" folk music by Bartók and Kodály, often depicted as a purely "scientific" matter, responds directly to concerns raised by earlier writers about the "problem of Hungarian music," Hooker argues that the innovations of Bartók and Kodály and their circle are not so much in correcting a flawed concept of the national as in using the idea of national authenticity to open up freedom for composers to explore more stylistic options, including the exploration of modernist musical language. Meticulously researched and elegantly written, Redefining Hungarian Music from Liszt to Bartók is essential reading for musicologists, musicians, and concertgoers alike.



Download File Size:5.26 MB


Redefining Hungarian Music from Liszt to Bartok PDF eBook
€10
Customers who bought this program also bought:

Home| All Programs| Today added Progs| Your Orders| Helpdesk| Shopping cart      





Microsoft Office Pro 2021 €99

             

Microsoft Office 2021 for Mac €99






AutoCAD 2023 €110


SolidWorks 2022 €115


AutoCAD 2023 for Mac €110






Autodesk 3DS MAX 2023 €75

             

Autodesk Inventor Professional 2023 €95