Inge van Rij
Brahms's Song Collections
Inge van Rij
Brahms's Song Collections
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A detailed analysis of the songs of Johannes Brahms.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 284
- Erscheinungstermin: 24. August 2009
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 495g
- ISBN-13: 9780521121828
- ISBN-10: 0521121825
- Artikelnr.: 26985801
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 284
- Erscheinungstermin: 24. August 2009
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 495g
- ISBN-13: 9780521121828
- ISBN-10: 0521121825
- Artikelnr.: 26985801
Inge van Rij is a lecturer in music at Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand.
Introduction
Part I: Context
Organicism
Lyric cycles
Self-reflexivity, fragments, and Hoffmann's Kater Murr
Textual coherence in the song-cycle canon
Key sequence
Key characteristics and other alternative approaches to tonal sequence
Part II: Conception to publication
Before composing: texts and notebooks
From conception to arrangement: 'Heine cycles'
Ordering for publication
Titles and title pages
Flower imagery
Part III: Arrangement
Plot archetypes: sorrow to comfort
Narrative
Op. 32 as narrative
Op. 57 as narrative
Narrative elements in other bouquets
Self-reflexivity
Alternatives to narrative: juxtaposition and resonance
Tempo, closure, and cyclic patterning
'Wie Melodien'
Part IV: Performance
Performance contexts
Criteria in assembling a recital programme
Gender and dramatic characterisation
Identification between singer and narrator
Tessitura, range, and performance by several singers
Transposition
Performance and coherence in the Ophelia-Lieder
Part V: Reception
Reviews
Responses of Brahms's acquaintances
Identification of composer with narrator
Dedicatory cycles and the composer's voice
The graphic cycles of Max Klinger
Part VI: Cyclic Intent.
Part I: Context
Organicism
Lyric cycles
Self-reflexivity, fragments, and Hoffmann's Kater Murr
Textual coherence in the song-cycle canon
Key sequence
Key characteristics and other alternative approaches to tonal sequence
Part II: Conception to publication
Before composing: texts and notebooks
From conception to arrangement: 'Heine cycles'
Ordering for publication
Titles and title pages
Flower imagery
Part III: Arrangement
Plot archetypes: sorrow to comfort
Narrative
Op. 32 as narrative
Op. 57 as narrative
Narrative elements in other bouquets
Self-reflexivity
Alternatives to narrative: juxtaposition and resonance
Tempo, closure, and cyclic patterning
'Wie Melodien'
Part IV: Performance
Performance contexts
Criteria in assembling a recital programme
Gender and dramatic characterisation
Identification between singer and narrator
Tessitura, range, and performance by several singers
Transposition
Performance and coherence in the Ophelia-Lieder
Part V: Reception
Reviews
Responses of Brahms's acquaintances
Identification of composer with narrator
Dedicatory cycles and the composer's voice
The graphic cycles of Max Klinger
Part VI: Cyclic Intent.
Introduction
Part I: Context
Organicism
Lyric cycles
Self-reflexivity, fragments, and Hoffmann's Kater Murr
Textual coherence in the song-cycle canon
Key sequence
Key characteristics and other alternative approaches to tonal sequence
Part II: Conception to publication
Before composing: texts and notebooks
From conception to arrangement: 'Heine cycles'
Ordering for publication
Titles and title pages
Flower imagery
Part III: Arrangement
Plot archetypes: sorrow to comfort
Narrative
Op. 32 as narrative
Op. 57 as narrative
Narrative elements in other bouquets
Self-reflexivity
Alternatives to narrative: juxtaposition and resonance
Tempo, closure, and cyclic patterning
'Wie Melodien'
Part IV: Performance
Performance contexts
Criteria in assembling a recital programme
Gender and dramatic characterisation
Identification between singer and narrator
Tessitura, range, and performance by several singers
Transposition
Performance and coherence in the Ophelia-Lieder
Part V: Reception
Reviews
Responses of Brahms's acquaintances
Identification of composer with narrator
Dedicatory cycles and the composer's voice
The graphic cycles of Max Klinger
Part VI: Cyclic Intent.
Part I: Context
Organicism
Lyric cycles
Self-reflexivity, fragments, and Hoffmann's Kater Murr
Textual coherence in the song-cycle canon
Key sequence
Key characteristics and other alternative approaches to tonal sequence
Part II: Conception to publication
Before composing: texts and notebooks
From conception to arrangement: 'Heine cycles'
Ordering for publication
Titles and title pages
Flower imagery
Part III: Arrangement
Plot archetypes: sorrow to comfort
Narrative
Op. 32 as narrative
Op. 57 as narrative
Narrative elements in other bouquets
Self-reflexivity
Alternatives to narrative: juxtaposition and resonance
Tempo, closure, and cyclic patterning
'Wie Melodien'
Part IV: Performance
Performance contexts
Criteria in assembling a recital programme
Gender and dramatic characterisation
Identification between singer and narrator
Tessitura, range, and performance by several singers
Transposition
Performance and coherence in the Ophelia-Lieder
Part V: Reception
Reviews
Responses of Brahms's acquaintances
Identification of composer with narrator
Dedicatory cycles and the composer's voice
The graphic cycles of Max Klinger
Part VI: Cyclic Intent.