1st Edition

Gerhard on Music Selected Writings

By Roberto Gerhard, Meirion Bowen Copyright 2000
    290 Pages
    by Routledge

    300 Pages
    by Routledge

    This title was first published in 2000:  Catalan-born composer Roberto Gerhard (1896-1970) left significant legacies - both musical and documentary. Exiled in Cambridge with the onset of the Spanish Civil War, he gradually achieved wide recognition by performers and conductors, in both Britain and America, as a composer whose music was essential to the modern repertoire. In this work, Meirion Bowen collects many of the composer's articles, reviews, lectures and broadcasts to demonstrate the full extent and continuity of Gerhard's artistic and creative thinking. The writings have been arranged thematically to emphasize the evolution of Gerhard's musical interests. His attachment to Spanish and Catalonian traditions broadened into a fascination with folk music of all kinds. His studies with Schoenberg in the mid 1920s gave him the key to his own creative individuality; thereafter, his imaginative vitality led him eventually to experiment with electronic and concrete music and he continued breaking new ground, even in his final years.

    Part I: Composer and Public.  1. Listening to Music (1930).  2. The Composer and his audience (1960).  3. Second and Symbol (1957).  4. The Contemporary Musical Situation (1956).  Part II: Tradition and Innovation.  Music at the court of Alfonso V the Magnanimous (1936).  6. A Note on Felipe Pedrell (c. 1940).  7. New Musical Methods (1930).  8. Music and Poetry (1935).  Part III: Contemporary Composers (1929-1939).  9. Hanns Eisler (1898-1982).  10. Bartok.  11. Ildebrando Pizzetti.  12. Baltasa Samper.  13. Some Composers from Madrid.  Part IV: Music and Drama.  14. Opera (1930).  15. Music and Film (1930).  16. The Duenna (1949).  17. Music and Ballet.  Part V: New Horizons.  18. Schoenberg, Twelve-note Music and Serialism.  19. On Composition with Twelve Notes (1954).  20. Tonality in Twelve-tone Music (1952).  21. Developments in Twelve-tone Technique (1956).  22. Alban Ber: Obituary (1936).  23. Webern.  24. Twelve-note Technique in Stravinsky (1957).  25. Functions of the Series in Twelve-note Composition (1960).  Part VI: Music in a Post-War Context.  26. England, Spring 1945.  27. Concrete Music and Electronic Sound Composition (1959).  28. Sound Observed (1965).  29. The Plague (1964).  30. Introduction to Symphony No. 2 (1959).  31. "Is Modern Music Growing Old?" (1960).  32. Art and Anarchy (1961).  33. The Muse and Music Today (1962).  34. An Inaugrual Lecture (1961).