Adolphe Adam’s one-act opéra comique Le Châlet (1834) is a milestone in the history of rising cadence gestures and, as such (combined with its popularity), may have been a primary influence on other composers as rising cadence gestures proliferated in opera bouffe and both French and Viennese operetta later in the century, and eventually in the American musical during the twentieth century.Musi
The polka became a popular social dance very quickly in the early 1840s. Its music was the first to ...
Part 5b of this multi-part essay gathers compositions with ascending and upper-register cadence gest...
EVERIST, Mark (éd.)International audienceBetween 1833 and 1856, the composer Adolphe Adam published ...
Ascending cadence gestures are common in the repertoire of the operetta and in some early opéras com...
This is Part 5d of a multi-part essay gathering compositions with ascending lines and cadence gestur...
Part 3a of a multi-part essay gathers compositions with ascending lines and upper-register cadence g...
This continues Part 4 of a multi-part essay gathering compositions with ascending lines and upper-re...
This belongs to a multi-part essay series gathering compositions with ascending lines and upper-regi...
This is Part 3b of a multi-part essay gathering compositions with ascending lines and cadence gestur...
Orphée aux Enfers was Jacques Offenbach’s first success with a full-scale operetta and remains for m...
This essay continues from the Historical Survey Parts 4b & 4b2, which covered polkas between 1840 an...
Rising melodic figures have a long history in cadences in European music of all genres. This essay d...
This supplement has additional polkas from the 1840s and 1850s. Composers include, among others, Cha...
This essay supplements the Historical Survey Part 4b, which covered ascending cadence gestures in po...
This new documentation of traditional European and European-influenced music with ascending lines an...
The polka became a popular social dance very quickly in the early 1840s. Its music was the first to ...
Part 5b of this multi-part essay gathers compositions with ascending and upper-register cadence gest...
EVERIST, Mark (éd.)International audienceBetween 1833 and 1856, the composer Adolphe Adam published ...
Ascending cadence gestures are common in the repertoire of the operetta and in some early opéras com...
This is Part 5d of a multi-part essay gathering compositions with ascending lines and cadence gestur...
Part 3a of a multi-part essay gathers compositions with ascending lines and upper-register cadence g...
This continues Part 4 of a multi-part essay gathering compositions with ascending lines and upper-re...
This belongs to a multi-part essay series gathering compositions with ascending lines and upper-regi...
This is Part 3b of a multi-part essay gathering compositions with ascending lines and cadence gestur...
Orphée aux Enfers was Jacques Offenbach’s first success with a full-scale operetta and remains for m...
This essay continues from the Historical Survey Parts 4b & 4b2, which covered polkas between 1840 an...
Rising melodic figures have a long history in cadences in European music of all genres. This essay d...
This supplement has additional polkas from the 1840s and 1850s. Composers include, among others, Cha...
This essay supplements the Historical Survey Part 4b, which covered ascending cadence gestures in po...
This new documentation of traditional European and European-influenced music with ascending lines an...
The polka became a popular social dance very quickly in the early 1840s. Its music was the first to ...
Part 5b of this multi-part essay gathers compositions with ascending and upper-register cadence gest...
EVERIST, Mark (éd.)International audienceBetween 1833 and 1856, the composer Adolphe Adam published ...