Composer Howard Hanson played a pivotal role in both the development and promotion of American concert music in the twentieth century. Born in Wahoo, Nebraska, to Swedish immigrants, Hanson grew up surrounded by people who followed Swedish customs (including folk song and dance), yet exhibited strong feelings of American patriotism. Hanson's earliest works, left unpublished, display the influence of Swedish folk music traditions in either direct quotation or stylistic imitation. As the winner of the first American Prix de Rome, Hanson traveled to Italy to study at the American Academy, affording him the opportunity to travel for the first time to Sweden. While in Europe Hanson wrote some of his most important compositions, including the Sca...
Paul Hindemith (1895-1963)--composer, teacher, and performer of early music--was one of the inaugura...
Notions of the ‘Nordic’ have always been an issue in Norway’s national identity building, both befor...
Includes Catalog of music by Oliver Shaw (p. 185-224) and bibliographical references (p. 225-230). -...
Howard Hanson (1896-1981) is one of the most renowned neo-romantic American composers. With various ...
Howard Hanson was a Pulitzer Prize-winning composer, conductor, and music educator who was director ...
The purpose of this thesis is to examine Howard Hanson\u27s composition, Dies Natalis for Band, from...
One of the most defining characteristics of the nineteenth century is the global phenomenon of natio...
What is American music? For composers in the late nineteenth century, the question was not so easily...
The idea of expressing one’s national identity was popular among composers from the mid-19th century...
The genre of the symphony has long been recognized as a medium for constructing national identities ...
Howard Hanson was the first American composer who attained international prominence in the early 20t...
This work relates the evolution of Beethoven’s music to the historical evolution of a unique Germani...
In the two decades following the end of the Second World War, British attitudes to music from Scandi...
What Shall I Do With My Music? (interview with Howard Hanson) For Mastering Scale-Like Passages Evol...
In the more recent past, nationalism, or a pride in one\u27s country, has been the dominating factor...
Paul Hindemith (1895-1963)--composer, teacher, and performer of early music--was one of the inaugura...
Notions of the ‘Nordic’ have always been an issue in Norway’s national identity building, both befor...
Includes Catalog of music by Oliver Shaw (p. 185-224) and bibliographical references (p. 225-230). -...
Howard Hanson (1896-1981) is one of the most renowned neo-romantic American composers. With various ...
Howard Hanson was a Pulitzer Prize-winning composer, conductor, and music educator who was director ...
The purpose of this thesis is to examine Howard Hanson\u27s composition, Dies Natalis for Band, from...
One of the most defining characteristics of the nineteenth century is the global phenomenon of natio...
What is American music? For composers in the late nineteenth century, the question was not so easily...
The idea of expressing one’s national identity was popular among composers from the mid-19th century...
The genre of the symphony has long been recognized as a medium for constructing national identities ...
Howard Hanson was the first American composer who attained international prominence in the early 20t...
This work relates the evolution of Beethoven’s music to the historical evolution of a unique Germani...
In the two decades following the end of the Second World War, British attitudes to music from Scandi...
What Shall I Do With My Music? (interview with Howard Hanson) For Mastering Scale-Like Passages Evol...
In the more recent past, nationalism, or a pride in one\u27s country, has been the dominating factor...
Paul Hindemith (1895-1963)--composer, teacher, and performer of early music--was one of the inaugura...
Notions of the ‘Nordic’ have always been an issue in Norway’s national identity building, both befor...
Includes Catalog of music by Oliver Shaw (p. 185-224) and bibliographical references (p. 225-230). -...