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Irving Fine

Irving Fine
Author: Phillip Ramey
Publisher: Pendragon Press
Total Pages: 362
Release: 2005
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9781576471166

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Ramey, a composer and pianist, discusses Fine's brief teaching career in the 1940s at his alma mater, Harvard University - shadowed, Fine was convinced, by a malign tradition of tacit anti-Semitism - and his subsequent years at the newly opened Brandeis University, where he flourished, founding the music department and introducing a landmark performing arts festival."


Music of Irving Fine

Music of Irving Fine
Author: Irving Fine
Publisher:
Total Pages: 2
Release: 1973
Genre: Orchestral music
ISBN:

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Music of Irving Fine

Music of Irving Fine
Author: Irving Fine
Publisher:
Total Pages: 2
Release: 1966
Genre:
ISBN:

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Fine Notations

Fine Notations
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 16
Release: 2001
Genre:
ISBN:

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The Irving Fine Collection, Ca. 1914-1962

The Irving Fine Collection, Ca. 1914-1962
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2000
Genre: Composers
ISBN:

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The career of Irving Fine is documented in the Library of Congress Music Division by approximately 4,350 items. The Irving Fine Collection consists of manuscript and printed music, sketchbooks, writings, personal and business correspondence, scrapbooks, programs, clippings, and sound recordings. This first online release presents a selection of 57 photographs, a sketchbook that includes sketches for the woodwind Partita and a string quartet, a manuscript score for the String Quartet (1952), and a recorded performance of the Quartet.


The Choral Music of Irving Fine

The Choral Music of Irving Fine
Author: Stephen Ray Coker
Publisher:
Total Pages: 214
Release: 1986
Genre: Choral music
ISBN:

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Irving Fine

Irving Fine
Author: Phillip Ramey
Publisher:
Total Pages: 20
Release: 1989
Genre:
ISBN:

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A Fine Romance

A Fine Romance
Author: David Lehman
Publisher: Schocken
Total Pages: 272
Release: 2009-10-06
Genre: Music
ISBN: 0805242716

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In A Fine Romance, David Lehman looks at the formation of the American songbook—the timeless numbers that became jazz standards, iconic love songs, and sound tracks to famous movies—and explores the extraordinary fact that this songbook was written almost exclusively by Jews. An acclaimed poet, editor, and cultural critic, David Lehman hears America singing—with a Yiddish accent. He guides us through America in the golden age of song, when “Embraceable You,” “White Christmas,” “Easter Parade,” “Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered,” “Can’t Help Lovin’ Dat Man,” “My Romance,” “Cheek to Cheek,” “Stormy Weather,” and countless others became nothing less than the American sound track. The stories behind these songs, the shows from which many of them came, and the shows from which many of them came, and the composers and lyricists who wrote them give voice to a specifically American saga of love, longing, assimilation, and transformation. Lehman’s analytical skills, wit, and exuberance infuse this book with an energy and a tone like no other: at once sharply observant, personally searching, and attuned to the songs that all of us love. He helps us understand how natural it should be that Wizard of Oz composer Harold Arlen was the son of a cantor who incorporated “Over the Rainbow” into his Sabbath liturgy, and why Cole Porter—the rare non-Jew in this pantheon of musicians who wrote these classic songs shaped America even as America was shaping them. (Part of the Jewish Encounter series)


Neoclassical Music in America

Neoclassical Music in America
Author: R. James Tobin
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 301
Release: 2014-07-02
Genre: Music
ISBN: 0810884402

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From the 1920s to the 1950s, neoclassicism was one of the dominant movements in American music. Today this music is largely in eclipse, mostly absent in performance and even from accounts of music history, in spite of—and initially because of—its adherence to an expanded tonality. No previous book has focused on the nature and scope of this musical tradition. Neoclassical Music in America: Voices of Clarity and Restraint makes clear what neoclassicism was, how it emerged in America, and what happened to it. Music reviewer and scholar, R. James Tobin argues that efforts to define musical neoclassicism as a style largely fail because of the stylistic diversity of the music that fall within its scope. However, neoclassicists as different from one another as the influential Igor Stravinsky and Paul Hindemith did have a classical aesthetic in common, the basic characteristics of which extend to other neoclassicists This study focuses, in particular, on a group of interrelated neoclassical American composers who came to full maturity in the 1940s. These included Harvard professor Walter Piston, who had studied in France in the 1920s; Harold Shapero, the most traditional of the group; Irving Fine and Arthur Berger, his colleagues at Brandeis; Lukas Foss, later an experimentalist composer whose origins lay in neoclassicism of the 1940s; Alexei Haieff, and Ingolf Dahl, both close associates of Stravinsky; and others. Tobin surveys the careers of these figures, drawing especially on early reviews of performances before offering his own critical assessment of individual works. Adventurous collectors of recordings, performing musicians, concert and broadcasting programmers, as well as music and cultural historians and those interested in musical aesthetics, will find much of interest here. Dates of composition, approximate duration of individual works, and discographies add to the work’s reference value.


Reflections of an American Composer

Reflections of an American Composer
Author: Arthur Berger
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 288
Release: 2002-11-28
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0520232518

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A book of memoirs and essays by notable composer, critic and teacher Arthur Berger. The author writes vividly about the music scenes in New York, Paris, and Boston, and of his work with notable colleagues such as Stravinsky, Copeland, and Virgil Thompson.