Placeholder text
Dead Composers, Living Audiences
0 - Used - good
Description
As both a singer and a teacher, the author delivers a resounding perspective in this book. He also brings the important insights of others from other fields such as literature, philosophy, and theater. The author's discussions revolve around the situation of classical music, a situation that in many ways exemplifies the gradual transformation of the rationalization of the world, into the radical commodification of the world. This outcome will be shown to be intimately linked to ethical and aesthetic issues, which will be developed by means of an extended consideration of the conflict between the rational and the a-rational as it plays itself out in contrasts between music, art, and literature, and science and philosophy.
The book delves into the problem of teaching music, particularly the problems commonly dealt with in the teaching studio. Teachers of the Western music tradition have developed tried and true techniques for dealing with these problems as they occur in teaching, generally by helping students toward an understanding of historical, musical, technical and stylistic problems, among a host of others. These "common" problems of teaching are, however, symptomatic of very deep, complicated, and endemic philosophical issues that have, so far, been insufficiently discussed in a form that might be useful to teachers, performers, and lovers of the music of the Western classical music tradition. The most unique contribution of these discussions is the investigation into what is not discussed to any depth in pedagogy books--what lies behind or beneath these commonly experienced problems.
This is a critical book for collections in music.
Product details
Number of Pages:
380
Release Date:
2008-10-30
Publication Date:
2008-10-28
Publisher:
Cambria Press
Languages:
Original:
English
ISBN10:
160497558X
ISBN13:
9781604975581
GPSR Manufacturer Reference:
Weight:
766 g
Height:
157 cm
Width:
235 cm
Thickness:
27 cm
Currently sold out