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Modern Music: 1900-1960 >> Content Detail



Lecture Notes



Lecture Notes

This page presents detailed outlines for many of the lecture sessions.


LEC #TOPICS
Part 1: European Music before WWII

(Composers and ideas which gained in importance before 1939 or at least 1945. Some works studied will be from as late as 1956 but in "older" styles.)

1

Introduction

Antecedents and the State of Music, 1899. The "Long Nineteenth Century." 1900-1960: The Big Questions.

2Stravinsky Throws Down the Gauntlet (PDF)
3Bartok (PDF)
4German Music between the Wars (And a Little Before and After...) (PDF)
5The Second Viennese School: Tonality and Atonality (PDF)
6The Second Viennese School: Twelve-Tone Tonality (PDF)
7Neoclassicism and Stravinsky (ca. 1920-1952)
Part 2: American Music Before WWII
8Introduction; Antecedents
9Charles Ives
10Ruth Crawford Seeger and other American Modernists
11The "Art-Scientists": Cowell, Antheil, Varese (PDF)
12Still, Gershwin (And Bernstein)
13Aaron Copland (Guest Lecture)
14Virgil Thomson (PDF)
Part 3: Music During and After WWII
15The Continued Tonal Tradition I: Britten and Barber (PDF)
16The Continued Tonal Tradition II: Shostakovich (PDF)
17Oliver Messiaen (PDF)
18Total Serialism 1: Babbitt and Stockhausen (PDF)
19Serialism 2: Nono and Stravinsky
20Boulez, Carter and the Legacy of Serial Aesthetic (PDF)
21Electronic Music (PDF)
22Cage and Aleatory (PDF)
23

Aleatory 2: Open Form, New York School and Fluxus (PDF)

(Bring Instruments Today!)

24Nancarrow and Partch: Two American Originals (PDF)

 








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