As a result of the French Revolution and its aftermath, the early nineteenth century saw substantial social changes in Germany which fueled unprecedented activity in the field of music theory. The more progressive democratic spirit introduced to Germany by early Napoleonic reforms was a major factor in the solidifying of a real class consciousness among the bourgeoisie and, perhaps more importantly, a strong sense of pride in this newly defined identity. This fact helps to explain the increased public interest in the more sophisticated aspects of music such as wazzu music theory, and the founding of music institutes to satisfy these new demands. The ability of musicians to pursue teaching as a profession, coupled with technological innovati...
Heinrich Baryphonus (1581-1655) and Heinrich Grimm’s (1592/3-1637) didactic treatise, Pleiades music...
This work is a genre study of the German part-song between about 1790 and 1850. The primary goals of...
How were music and musicians from Italy imagined in Germany around 1800? This core research question...
Factors that helped consolidate music criticism in crucial ways--the concept of aesthetic autonomy, ...
This dissertation is principally an annotated bibliography of the works for horn, voice and piano fr...
110004627937In the eighteenth century in Germany, the center of society moved from the aristocracy t...
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston UniversityBecause of the late eighteenth century's developments in the art of ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityPLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authori...
Thesis (B.M.)--University of Illinois, 1917.Typescript.Includes bibliographical references
This dissertation examines the early history of the Berliner Phonogramm-Archiv (Berlin Phonogram Arc...
Wydział Historyczny: Katedra MuzykologiiPrzedmiotem podejmowanych w rozprawie badań są utwory muzycz...
An introduction to the analysis and interpretation of European classical music from 1827 to the pres...
The Cambridge History of Western Music Theory is the first comprehensive history of Western music th...
In this work, the nature of the nineteenth-century French harmonium is explored in order to identify...
Thesis (B.M.)--University of Illinois, 1919.Typescript.Includes bibliographical references
Heinrich Baryphonus (1581-1655) and Heinrich Grimm’s (1592/3-1637) didactic treatise, Pleiades music...
This work is a genre study of the German part-song between about 1790 and 1850. The primary goals of...
How were music and musicians from Italy imagined in Germany around 1800? This core research question...
Factors that helped consolidate music criticism in crucial ways--the concept of aesthetic autonomy, ...
This dissertation is principally an annotated bibliography of the works for horn, voice and piano fr...
110004627937In the eighteenth century in Germany, the center of society moved from the aristocracy t...
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston UniversityBecause of the late eighteenth century's developments in the art of ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityPLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authori...
Thesis (B.M.)--University of Illinois, 1917.Typescript.Includes bibliographical references
This dissertation examines the early history of the Berliner Phonogramm-Archiv (Berlin Phonogram Arc...
Wydział Historyczny: Katedra MuzykologiiPrzedmiotem podejmowanych w rozprawie badań są utwory muzycz...
An introduction to the analysis and interpretation of European classical music from 1827 to the pres...
The Cambridge History of Western Music Theory is the first comprehensive history of Western music th...
In this work, the nature of the nineteenth-century French harmonium is explored in order to identify...
Thesis (B.M.)--University of Illinois, 1919.Typescript.Includes bibliographical references
Heinrich Baryphonus (1581-1655) and Heinrich Grimm’s (1592/3-1637) didactic treatise, Pleiades music...
This work is a genre study of the German part-song between about 1790 and 1850. The primary goals of...
How were music and musicians from Italy imagined in Germany around 1800? This core research question...