Restoration London was replete with opportunities to listen to music, even before the first public concerts were established. The Restoration theatre was one of the venues where Londoners had ample opportunity to listen to the newest compositions performed by professionals. But how did listeners write about their experiences? What did listeners notice? What categories were chosen to describe a listening experience? On the basis of the diary of Samuel Pepys, an enthusiastic music lover, the complex issue of early modern writing about listening is approached and analysed in more detail
Music in the early modern world was an art form fraught with tensions. Writers from a wide variety o...
What does it mean to hear scientifically? What does it mean to see musically? This volume uncovers a...
My dissertation investigates the experience of listening to previously-heard music assembled by comp...
John Yeoman was a Somerset farmer and potter who travelled to London in 1774 and 1777/8, recording i...
This article examines William Shakespeare's plays for their relationship to Reformation music. It sk...
After the civil conflicts of the seventeenth century, England during the Restoration period began to...
London dominated the English musical scene from 1700 to 1850, but provincial listeners were increasi...
The current orthodoxy is that before 1609, music in Shakespeare was largely restricted to songs, tru...
This thesis addresses three aspects of the relationship between audience, playhouse and play in Rest...
The current orthodoxy is that before 1609, music in Shakespeare was largely restricted to songs, tr...
This themed issue of Nineteenth-Century Music Review focuses on the study of listeners in history. T...
This thesis uses the joint approaches of theatre research and musicology to reveal the overlooked so...
This thesis looks at the development of an identifiable ‘alternative classical scene’ which emerged ...
My dissertation investigates the experience of listening to previously-heard music assembled by comp...
Accounts of life in the music profession by orchestral woodwind players have often been neglected in...
Music in the early modern world was an art form fraught with tensions. Writers from a wide variety o...
What does it mean to hear scientifically? What does it mean to see musically? This volume uncovers a...
My dissertation investigates the experience of listening to previously-heard music assembled by comp...
John Yeoman was a Somerset farmer and potter who travelled to London in 1774 and 1777/8, recording i...
This article examines William Shakespeare's plays for their relationship to Reformation music. It sk...
After the civil conflicts of the seventeenth century, England during the Restoration period began to...
London dominated the English musical scene from 1700 to 1850, but provincial listeners were increasi...
The current orthodoxy is that before 1609, music in Shakespeare was largely restricted to songs, tru...
This thesis addresses three aspects of the relationship between audience, playhouse and play in Rest...
The current orthodoxy is that before 1609, music in Shakespeare was largely restricted to songs, tr...
This themed issue of Nineteenth-Century Music Review focuses on the study of listeners in history. T...
This thesis uses the joint approaches of theatre research and musicology to reveal the overlooked so...
This thesis looks at the development of an identifiable ‘alternative classical scene’ which emerged ...
My dissertation investigates the experience of listening to previously-heard music assembled by comp...
Accounts of life in the music profession by orchestral woodwind players have often been neglected in...
Music in the early modern world was an art form fraught with tensions. Writers from a wide variety o...
What does it mean to hear scientifically? What does it mean to see musically? This volume uncovers a...
My dissertation investigates the experience of listening to previously-heard music assembled by comp...