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19th-Century Music

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial en inglés
19th-Century Music publishes articles on all aspects of music having to do with the "long" nineteenth century. The period of coverage has no definite boundaries; it can extend well backward into the eighteenth century and well forward into the twentieth. Published tri-annually, the journal is open to studies of any musical or cultural development that affected nineteenth-century music and any such developments that nineteenth-century music subsequently affected. The topics are as diverse as the long century itself. They include music of any type or origin and include, but are not limited to, issues of composition, performance, social and cultural context, hermeneutics, aesthetics, music theory, analysis, documentation, gender, sexuality, history, and historiography.
Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

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Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Período Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada desde jul. 1977 / JSTOR

Información

Tipo de recurso:

revistas

ISSN impreso

0148-2076

ISSN electrónico

1533-8606

Editor responsable

University of California Press

País de edición

Estados Unidos

Fecha de publicación

Cobertura temática

Tabla de contenidos

Directions to Contributors

Palabras clave: Music.

Pp. 209-209

Table of Contents

Palabras clave: Music.

Pp. i-i

Front Matter

Palabras clave: Music.

Pp. ii-ii

Preface

Berthold Hoeckner

Palabras clave: Music.

Pp. iii-iv

Dream Analysis: Korngold, Mendelssohn, and Musical Adaptations in Warner Bros.' A Midsummer Night's Dream (1935)

Nathan Platte

<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title> <jats:p>In his first film score, Erich Wolfgang Korngold adapted the works of Felix Mendelssohn so that the music seemed to interact and respond with the visual editing of the film, A Midsummer Night's Dream (Warner Bros., 1935). By detailing the facets of this unusual production, which range from Korngold's presence on the set to the publicity department's efforts to spotlight Mendelssohn's music and Korngold's arrangements, I argue that the score for Dream played an important role in elevating film music and film composers within the hierarchy of Hollywood production and publicity. Not only was the Mendelssohn-Korngold score given greater consideration during the film's making, but also audiences were reminded to listen to the film's music, a facet rarely acknowledged in other contemporaneous publicity drives. Importantly, these changes were effected and rationalized through the self-conscious foregrounding of the music, principles, and rhetoric of nineteenth-century Romanticism. Documents at the Warner Bros. Archive reveal how the confluence of these factors not only established the unusual tenor of Korngold's career within the Hollywood studio system but also helped construct the film composer's public image as an incongruously independent artist working within an otherwise collaborative medium.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Music.

Pp. 211-236

Screwball Fantasia: Classical Music inUnfaithfully Yours

Martin Marks

Palabras clave: Music.

Pp. 237-270

Recurring Dreams and Moving Images: The Cinematic Appropriation of Schumann's Op. 15, No. 7

Jeremy Barham

Palabras clave: Music.

Pp. 271-301

Beethoven Overcome: Romantic and Existentialist Utopia in Andrei Tarkovsky'sStalker

Tobias Pontara

Palabras clave: Music.

Pp. 302-315

The Operatics of Detachment:Toscain the James Bond FilmQuantum of Solace

Marcia J. Citron

Palabras clave: Music.

Pp. 316-340

Listening to the Self: The Shawshank Redemption and the Technology of Music

Daniel K. L. Chua

<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title> <jats:p>Music has often been used to symbolize and express ontological experiences. This article explores a mode of nineteenth-century self-audition where music captures a glimpse of the freedom that lies at the core of the subject. This mode of listening has intensified with the development of modern technology and is still prevalent in constructing the identity of the self. The opera scene from the Shawshank Redemption not only is an example of this special effect, but provides a narrative of how music achieves this affect, creating an ideal and virtual self through sound technology.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Music.

Pp. 341-355