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British Musical Criticism and Intellectual Thought, 1850-1950

  • Editor: Dibble, Jeremy
  • Editor: Horton, Julian
A well thought-out publication and a substantial contribution to an as yet under-represented area of British music studies

Book

$122.50

Usually despatched in 5 - 7 working days

Contents

  • Introduction: Trends in British Musical Thought, 1850-1950 - Jeremy Dibble and Julian Horton
  • Avoiding 'Coarse Invective' and 'Unseemly Vehemence': English Music Criticism, 1850-1870 - Peter Horton
  • Spencer, Sympathy and the Oxford School of Music Criticism - Bennett Zon
  • Free Thought and the Musician: Ernest Walker, the 'English Hanslick' - Jeremy Dibble
  • Ernest Newman and the Promise of Method in Biography, Criticism and History - Paul Watt
  • 'Making Symphony Articulate': Bernard Shaw's Sense of Music History - Harry White
  • Analysis and Value Judgment: Schumann, Bruckner and Tovey's Essays in Musical Analysis - Julian Horton
  • The Scholar as Critic: Edward J. Dent - Karen Arrandale
  • Russia and Eastern Europe - Philip Ross Bullock
  • Anti-Intellectualism and the Rhetoric of 'National Character' in Music: The Vulgarity of Over-Refinement - Sarah Collins
  • Chosen Causes: Writings on Music by Bernard van Dieren, Peter Warlock and Cecil Gray - Seamas de Barra
  • 'Es klang so alt und war doch so neu': Vaughan Williams, Aesthetics and History - Aidan J. Thomson
  • Constant Lambert: A Critic for Today? A Commentary on Music Ho! - Christopher Mark
  • The Challenge to Goodwill: Herbert Howells, Alban Berg and 'The Modern Problem' - Jonathan Clinch
  • Hans Keller: The Making of an 'Anti-Critic' -
  • Select Bibliography