Front cover image for The Cambridge history of eighteenth-century music

The Cambridge history of eighteenth-century music

Simon P. Keefe (Editor)
The eighteenth century arguably boasts a more remarkable group of significant musical figures, and a more engaging combination of genres, styles and aesthetic orientations, than any century before or since, yet huge swathes of its musical activity remain under-appreciated. The Cambridge History of Eighteenth-Century Music provides a comprehensive survey, examining little-known repertories, works and musical trends alongside more familiar ones. Rather than relying on temporal, periodic and composer-related phenomena to structure the volume, it is organised by genre; chapters are grouped according to the traditional distinctions of music for the church, music for the theatre and music for the concert room that conditioned so much thinking, activity and output in the eighteenth century. A valuable summation of current research in this area, the volume also encourages readers to think of eighteenth-century music less in terms of overtly teleological developments than of interacting and mutually stimulating musical cultures and practices
Print Book, English, 2009
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2009
Aufsatzsammlung
xvii, 798 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
9780521663199, 9781107643970, 9781139056038, 0521663199, 110764397X, 1139056034
320802718
Print version:
List of illustrations
viii
Notes on contributorsix
Editor's prefacexv
Prelude1(2)
The musical map of Europe c. 1700
3(24)
Stephen Rose
PART I MUSIC FOR THE CHURCH
27(154)
Catholic church music in Italy, and the Spanish and Portuguese Empires
29(30)
Paul R. Laird
Catholic sacred music in Austria
59(54)
Jen-Yen Chen
Catholic church music in France
113(14)
Jean-Paul C. Montagnier
Lutheran church music
127(41)
Stephen Rose
Protestant church music in England and America
168(13)
Charles E. Brewer
INTERLUDE
181(20)
Listening, thinking and writing
183(18)
David Schroeder
PART II MUSIC FOR THE THEATRE
201(232)
Italian opera in the eighteenth century
203(69)
Margaret R. Butler
Opera in Paris from Campra to Rameau
272(23)
Lois Rosow
An instinct for parody and a spirit for revolution: Parisian opera, 1752-1800
295(36)
Michael Fend
German opera from Reinhard Keiser to Peter Winter
331(54)
Claudia Maurer Zenck
Anke Caton
Simon P. Keefe
The lure of aria, procession and spectacle: opera in eighteenth-century London
385(17)
Michael Burden
Music theatre in Spain
402(18)
Rainer Kleinertz
Opera in Sweden
420(13)
Greger Andersson
INTERLUDE
433(22)
Performance in the eighteenth century
435(20)
John Irving
PART III MUSIC FOR THE SALON AND CONCERT ROOM
455(206)
Keyboard music from Couperin to early Beethoven
457(35)
Rohan Stewart-MacDonald
The serenata in the eighteenth century
492(21)
Stefanie Tcharos
Private music in public spheres: chamber cantata and song
513(28)
Berta Joncus
Handel and English oratorio
541(15)
Eva Zollner
The overture-suite, concerto grosso, ripieno concerto and Harmoniemusik in the eighteenth century
556(27)
Steven Zohn
Concerto of the individual
583(30)
Simon McVeigh
Eighteenth-century symphonies: an unfinished dialogue
613(35)
Richard Will
The string quartet
648(13)
Cliff Eisen
POSTLUDE
661(28)
Across the divide: currents of musical thought in Europe, c. 1790-1810
663(26)
Simon P. Keefe
Appendix I. Chronology689(20)
David Black
Appendix II. Institutions in major European cities709(16)
David Black
Appendix III. Personalia725(49)
David Black
Index774
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