One of the most forthright and talented of American composers writes here of the part played by the freely imaginative mind in composing, performing, and listening to music. He urges more frequent performance and more se...

Buy Now From Amazon

Product Review

One of the most forthright and talented of American composers writes here of the part played by the freely imaginative mind in composing, performing, and listening to music. He urges more frequent performance and more sensitive hearing of the music of new composers. He discusses sound media, new and old, and looks toward a musical future in which the timbres and intensities developed by the electronic engineer may find their musical shape and meaning. He considers the twentieth-century revolt against classical form and tonality, and the recent disturbing political interference with the form and content of music. He analyzes American and contemporary European music and the flowering of specifically Western imagination in Villa-Lobos and Charles Ives.

The final chapter is an account, partially autobiographical, of the composer who seeks to find, in an industrial society like that of the United States, justification for the life of art in the life about him. Mr. Copeland, whose spectacular success in arriving at a musical vernacular has brought him a wide audience, will acquire as many readers as he has listeners with this imaginatively written book.

Similar Products

Poetics of Music in the Form of Six Lessons (The Charles Eliot Norton Lectures)What to Listen for in Music (Signet Classics)The Joy of Music Leonard BernsteinFree Play: Improvisation in Life and ArtThe Unanswered Question: Six Talks at Harvard (The Charles Eliot Norton Lectures)Effortless Mastery: Liberating the Master Musician Within (Book + CD set)i: six nonlectures (The Charles Eliot Norton Lectures)Guidelines for Style AnalysisMusical Form and Musical PerformanceThe Music Lesson: A Spiritual Search for Growth Through Music