Throughout the history of Western music, musicians have almost invariably discussed the keyboard fugue and other extreme forms of polyphony as signs of something that transcends human subjectivity. Despite the persistence of this critical topos, musicians shifted their approach to it around the beginning of the nineteenth century. The shift involved both a change in the technique of counterpoint and a change in the way counterpoint was interpreted. Composers sought to invest the fugue with a new dramatic and teleological thrust suitable to modern times, and critically minded musicians changed their interpretive method so as to emphasize the passage of time. Whereas musicians of the early eighteenth century read counterpoint and the fugue al...
Studies of early 20th-century performance practice tend to focus on features that are alien to late ...
In the twentieth century, time became a key-concept for music – maybe the art more dependent on time...
Fugue for J. S. Bach was a natural language; he wrote fugues in organ toccatas and voluntaries, in m...
Throughout the history of Western music, musicians have almost invariably discussed the keyboard fug...
This dissertation posits that an essential aspect of temporal experience in Bach's keyboard fugues r...
The Renaissance composer Crispinus van Stappen was born during a time in which luxuries such as clou...
Early Music, its history, theory and practice, has become a vigorously discussed theme in the field ...
This research project deals with the galant aspects of Wilhelm Friedemann Bach’s eight keyboard fugu...
We know from eighteenth-century sources on performance practice that tempo fluctuations in the shape...
Fugue for J. S. Bach was a natural language; he wrote fugues in organ toccatas and voluntaries, in m...
Twentieth century composers of music for the piano often make use of certain unusual effects that pr...
This essay examines three aspects of time sometimes misunderstood by organists interpreting Robert S...
This paper explores keyboard technology in music from the Baroque era to today. Central focus is on ...
The article pays homage to the leading authority of 20th century Hungarian music aesthetics, József ...
This dissertation takes a long view of the history of temporal constructions in writings on music, e...
Studies of early 20th-century performance practice tend to focus on features that are alien to late ...
In the twentieth century, time became a key-concept for music – maybe the art more dependent on time...
Fugue for J. S. Bach was a natural language; he wrote fugues in organ toccatas and voluntaries, in m...
Throughout the history of Western music, musicians have almost invariably discussed the keyboard fug...
This dissertation posits that an essential aspect of temporal experience in Bach's keyboard fugues r...
The Renaissance composer Crispinus van Stappen was born during a time in which luxuries such as clou...
Early Music, its history, theory and practice, has become a vigorously discussed theme in the field ...
This research project deals with the galant aspects of Wilhelm Friedemann Bach’s eight keyboard fugu...
We know from eighteenth-century sources on performance practice that tempo fluctuations in the shape...
Fugue for J. S. Bach was a natural language; he wrote fugues in organ toccatas and voluntaries, in m...
Twentieth century composers of music for the piano often make use of certain unusual effects that pr...
This essay examines three aspects of time sometimes misunderstood by organists interpreting Robert S...
This paper explores keyboard technology in music from the Baroque era to today. Central focus is on ...
The article pays homage to the leading authority of 20th century Hungarian music aesthetics, József ...
This dissertation takes a long view of the history of temporal constructions in writings on music, e...
Studies of early 20th-century performance practice tend to focus on features that are alien to late ...
In the twentieth century, time became a key-concept for music – maybe the art more dependent on time...
Fugue for J. S. Bach was a natural language; he wrote fugues in organ toccatas and voluntaries, in m...