French Musical Life

French Musical Life
Author: Katharine Ellis
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 445
Release: 2022
Genre: Music
ISBN: 0197600166

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Explicitly or not, the historical musicology of post-Revolutionary France has focused on Paris as a proxy for the rest of the country. This distorting lens is the legacy of political and cultural struggle during the long nineteenth century, indicating a French Revolution unresolved both then and now. In light of the capital's power as the seat of a centralizing French state (which provincials found 'colonizing') and as a cosmopolitan musical crossroads of nineteenth-century Europe, the struggles inherent in creating sustainable musical cultures outside Paris, and in composing local and regionalist music, are ripe for analysis. Replacement of 'France' with Paris has encouraged normative history-writing articulated by the capital's opera and concert life. Regional practices have been ignored, disparaged or treated piecemeal. This book is a study of French musical centralization and its discontents during the period leading up to and beyond the "provincial awakening" of the Belle Époque. The book explains how different kinds of artistic decentralization and regionalism were hard won (or not) across a politically turbulent century from the 1830s to World War II. In doing so it redraws the historical map of musical power relations in mainland France. Based on work in over 70 archives, chapters on conservatoires, concert life, stage music, folk music and composition reveal how tensions of State and locality played out differently depending on the structures and funding mechanisms in place, the musical priorities of different communities, and the presence or absence of galvanizing musicians. Progressively, the book shifts from musical contexts to musical content, exploring the pressure point of folk music and its translation into "local color" for officials who perpetually feared national division. Control over composition on the one hand, and the emotional intensity of folk-based musical experience on the other, emerges as a matter of consistent official praxis. In terms of "French music" and its compositional styles, what results is a surprising new historiography of French neoclassicism, bound into and growing out of a study of diversity and its limits in daily musical life.


French Musical Life
Language: en
Pages: 445
Authors: Katharine Ellis
Categories: Music
Type: BOOK - Published: 2022 - Publisher: Oxford University Press

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Explicitly or not, the historical musicology of post-Revolutionary France has focused on Paris as a proxy for the rest of the country. This distorting lens is t
Marguerite Long
Language: en
Pages: 268
Authors: Cecilia Dunoyer
Categories: Biography & Autobiography
Type: BOOK - Published: 1993-12-22 - Publisher: Indiana University Press

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"Cecilia Dunoyer has written a thoughtful and carefully researched work. Not only is her book crammed with information on French music, performers, and composer
The Creative Labor of Music Patronage in Interwar France
Language: en
Pages: 256
Authors: Louis K. Epstein
Categories: Music
Type: BOOK - Published: 2022 - Publisher: Boydell & Brewer

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Challenges the longstanding perception that modernist composers made art, not money, and that those who made money somehow failed to make art.Patrons have long
Performing Propaganda
Language: en
Pages: 256
Authors: Rachel Moore
Categories: Music
Type: BOOK - Published: 2018 - Publisher: Music in Society and Culture

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In the First World War, civilian life played a fundamental part in the war effort; and music was no exception.
Canonic Repertories and the French Musical Press
Language: en
Pages: 328
Authors: William Weber
Categories: History
Type: BOOK - Published: 2021 - Publisher: Boydell & Brewer

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A bold application of the concept of canonical works to the development of French operatic and concert life in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.