anthonynewmanmusician.org
Anthony Newman | bio
http://www.anthonynewmanmusician.org/bio.html
Described by Wynton Marsalis as The High Priest of Bach, and by Time Magazine as The High Priest of the Harpsichord, Newman continues his 50 year career as America's leading organist, harpsichordist and Bach specialist. He has worked with the greats of chamber music orchestras: St. Paul Chamber, LA Chamber, Budapest Chamber, Scottish Chamber, and the 92nd St. Y Chamber Orchestras. Larger symphonic groups include: Seattle (over 40 appearances), Los Angeles, San Diego, Calgary, Denver, and New ...His works...
sweetpeareview.blogspot.com
Macroscopic 2013: 28 December
http://sweetpeareview.blogspot.com/2013/12/28-december.html
Documenting the development of Greater Books. The major academic (English-language) journals on music:. Journal of the American Musicological Society. Journal of Music Theory. Journal of New Music Research. Journal of the Royal Music Association. Perspectives of New Music. The World's Wide Web. Links to the "great books" lists. A cinematic literary canon. John Lubbock - The Choice of Books - 1896. James Baldwin - The Book Lover - 1910. Charles W Eliot - Harvard Classics - 1909; 1917. Mortimer Adler and R...
hearinglandscapecritically.net
The Hearing Landscape Critically Network Team | Hearing Landscape Critically
https://hearinglandscapecritically.net/hlc-network
Listening Glass (Sound Mapping Tool by Teri Rueb and Alan Price). Night is Coming: a Threnody for the Victims of Marikana (film by Aryan Kaganof). River Blindness (Short Story by Stacy Hardy). The Hearing Landscape Critically Network Team. Dan’s first monograph, Grieg: Music, Landscape and Norwegian Identity ( Boydell and Brewer. Considers landscape as part of a complex engagement with musical modernism, in dialogue with received traditions of identity, structure and narrative. Dan has spoken widely at c...
matthew-werley.com
Matthew Werley | Blog
http://www.matthew-werley.com/blog
Richard Strauss's Historicist Operas. Homage à Britten 1913-2013. In January 1915, the American seminary professor Waldo S. Pratt (1857-1939). Coined the term "musicology" in the inaugural issue of. Re-reading the article today, it is quite remarkable just how forward-thinking, even proto-New Musicology-ish sounding his discussion reads in some passages. This is particularly palpable where he characterises musicology as a discipline open to engaging with a virtually infinite field of reference points:.