This thesis focuses on the areas which have become the periphery of historical narratives about music in high church parishes in the long nineteenth century, and addresses some of the underlying reasons which may have caused these topics to be moved away from the centre of conventional historical narratives. It considers the formation of a narrow canon of Tractarian music in the 1840s, and its transformation to a broader canon in the 1860s, which could be considered the first expression of the English choral tradition as it is known today. Finally, the thesis considers the effects of the English musical renaissance hypothesis upon later discussions of music from this period in academia and in practice. How did its apologists change our perc...
Introduction: This study provides an historical perspective on the choral music of Herbert Howells u...
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston UniversityIt was the purpose of this study of church music to discover contemp...
This thesis is the first in-depth study o f music regularly heard by a community that grew from 0.5 ...
This thesis explores the ways in which people in early Stuart England understood the place of music ...
This dissertation focuses on a previously unexplored aspect of music-making in the English parish ch...
Includes bibliographical references.The broader purpose of this study is to investigate musical chan...
Both academic scholarship and popular wisdom often assume women’s absence from Anglican musical hist...
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston University, 1956The existence of the Anglican Service and its music is predica...
This dissertation focuses on a previously unexplored aspect of music-making in the English parish ch...
This thesis is an interdisciplinary examination of the role religious music played in the formation ...
This item was digitized by the Internet Archive. Thesis (M.A.)--Boston UniversityDuring the first qu...
Provincial English Anglican and nonconformist church music, commonly known as psalmody, underwent pr...
This thesis is the first in-depth study o f music regularly heard by a community that grew from 0.5 ...
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston UniversityDuring the eighteenth century conditions within the Church of Englan...
In October 1900 Henry Hadow delivered a damning appraisal of Stainer’s Hymn Tunes, and in so doing, ...
Introduction: This study provides an historical perspective on the choral music of Herbert Howells u...
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston UniversityIt was the purpose of this study of church music to discover contemp...
This thesis is the first in-depth study o f music regularly heard by a community that grew from 0.5 ...
This thesis explores the ways in which people in early Stuart England understood the place of music ...
This dissertation focuses on a previously unexplored aspect of music-making in the English parish ch...
Includes bibliographical references.The broader purpose of this study is to investigate musical chan...
Both academic scholarship and popular wisdom often assume women’s absence from Anglican musical hist...
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston University, 1956The existence of the Anglican Service and its music is predica...
This dissertation focuses on a previously unexplored aspect of music-making in the English parish ch...
This thesis is an interdisciplinary examination of the role religious music played in the formation ...
This item was digitized by the Internet Archive. Thesis (M.A.)--Boston UniversityDuring the first qu...
Provincial English Anglican and nonconformist church music, commonly known as psalmody, underwent pr...
This thesis is the first in-depth study o f music regularly heard by a community that grew from 0.5 ...
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston UniversityDuring the eighteenth century conditions within the Church of Englan...
In October 1900 Henry Hadow delivered a damning appraisal of Stainer’s Hymn Tunes, and in so doing, ...
Introduction: This study provides an historical perspective on the choral music of Herbert Howells u...
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston UniversityIt was the purpose of this study of church music to discover contemp...
This thesis is the first in-depth study o f music regularly heard by a community that grew from 0.5 ...