The artistic avant‐garde, many of its theorists seem to agree, is a culture of subversion. Yet recent Anglo‐American musicology has tended to emphasise avant‐garde music's disavowal of issues of social and political concern. This volume assesses the intense engagement of many avant‐garde musicians in the tumultuous cultural and political developments of the 1960s, and the complex and often ambivalent status of their efforts when viewed in the wider social context. These musicians' conviction that aesthetic experiment and social progressiveness made natural bedfellows inevitably threw up some sharp dilemmas. Each chapter is briefly summarized
Of all the performing arts, none has been more circumspect about its theatrical nature than classica...
A century on from its first flowering, musical modernism still arouses passions and is riven by cont...
In the 20th century, jazz was an important artistic form. Depending on the particular European count...
During the 1960s many avant‐garde musicians were intensely involved in the era's social and politica...
The 1960s saw the emergence in the Netherlands of a generation of avant-garde musicians (including f...
Literary historian Rachel Potter has argued for ‘two genealogies of modernism’: the first is marked ...
John Cage’s compositions, representative of second generation avant-garde music, are an integral par...
I take an intensive look in this article at localised cultural change that nevertheless serves as an...
Music was integral to the profound cultural, social and political changes that swept the globe in 19...
My dissertation is concerned with two central issues: analysis of theory-practice gaps in aesthetic ...
It is almost impossible to understand the youth protest movements of the 1960s without some apprecia...
Peter Bürger’s critique of the historical avant garde accounts for its ineffectual nature as a polit...
A century on from its first flowering, musical modernism still arouses passions and is riven by cont...
What does it mean for something to be called “avant-garde”? The ambiguity of such a label fails to d...
There has been a marked resurgence of academic, media and commercial interest in progressive rock mu...
Of all the performing arts, none has been more circumspect about its theatrical nature than classica...
A century on from its first flowering, musical modernism still arouses passions and is riven by cont...
In the 20th century, jazz was an important artistic form. Depending on the particular European count...
During the 1960s many avant‐garde musicians were intensely involved in the era's social and politica...
The 1960s saw the emergence in the Netherlands of a generation of avant-garde musicians (including f...
Literary historian Rachel Potter has argued for ‘two genealogies of modernism’: the first is marked ...
John Cage’s compositions, representative of second generation avant-garde music, are an integral par...
I take an intensive look in this article at localised cultural change that nevertheless serves as an...
Music was integral to the profound cultural, social and political changes that swept the globe in 19...
My dissertation is concerned with two central issues: analysis of theory-practice gaps in aesthetic ...
It is almost impossible to understand the youth protest movements of the 1960s without some apprecia...
Peter Bürger’s critique of the historical avant garde accounts for its ineffectual nature as a polit...
A century on from its first flowering, musical modernism still arouses passions and is riven by cont...
What does it mean for something to be called “avant-garde”? The ambiguity of such a label fails to d...
There has been a marked resurgence of academic, media and commercial interest in progressive rock mu...
Of all the performing arts, none has been more circumspect about its theatrical nature than classica...
A century on from its first flowering, musical modernism still arouses passions and is riven by cont...
In the 20th century, jazz was an important artistic form. Depending on the particular European count...