British Musical Modernism explores the works of eleven key composers to reveal the rapid shifts of expression and technique that transformed British art music in the post-war period. Responding to radical avant-garde developments in post-war Europe, the Manchester Group composers - Alexander Goehr, Peter Maxwell Davies, and Harrison Birtwistle - and their contemporaries assimilated the serial-structuralist preoccupations of mid-century internationalism to an art grounded in resurgent local traditions. In close readings of some thirty-five scores, Philip Rupprecht traces a modernism suffused with the formal elegance of the 1950s, the exuberant theatricality of the 1960s, and - in the works of David Bedford and Tim Souster - the pop, minimalist, and live-electronic directions of the early 1970s. Setting music-analytic insights against a broader social-historical backdrop, Rupprecht traces a British musical modernism that was at once a collective artistic endeavor, and a sounding myth of national identity.
ISBN: | 9781316649527 |
Publication date: | 23rd March 2017 |
Author: | Philip Duke University, North Carolina Rupprecht |
Publisher: | Cambridge University Press |
Format: | Paperback |
Pagination: | 508 pages |
Series: | Music since 1900 |
Genres: |
Composers and songwriters Art music, orchestral and formal music Theory of music and musicology Creative therapy / Expressive therapies Popular music Cultural studies History and Archaeology History of art |