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Bartha, Denes, 1908-1993 . Haydn als Opernkapellmeister : die Haydn-Dokumente der Esterhazy-Opernsammlung, bearb. von Denes Bartha und Laszlo Somfai. Budapest, Verlag der Ungarischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1960.
Call#: Van Pelt Library ML410.H4 B245 1960


tagged haydn opera by dkelly ...on 07-FEB-08
Grave, Floyd K. (Floyd Kersey), 1945- . String quartets of Joseph Haydn / Floyd Grave and Margaret Grave. [0195173570 ] Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2006.
Call#: Van Pelt Library ML410.H4 G69 2006

Danuta Mirka in Eary Music: "Part One includes a perceptive discussion of texture and ensemble play. Although the issue of texture is one of long standing in scholarship on the Haydn quartets, the authors make a significant contribution by providing a fine-grained specification of textural types. Particularly persuasive is their account of thematic diffusion and conversation. They observe that the texture in which a succession of solo phrases is assigned to different ensemble members (described by Mara Parker as ‘polite conversation’) is not typical of Haydn. Instead, Haydn's string quartet technique is best represented as the flexible collaboration of individual instruments exchanging their functions as leading or subservient voices, and building up unified sound complexes."
tagged haydn string_quartet by dkelly ...and 1 other person ...on 04-JUL-07
Cambridge companion to Haydn / edited by Caryl Clark. [0521833477 (hardcover) ] Cambridge, UK ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2005.
Call#: Van Pelt Library ML410.H4 C17 2005

W. Dean Sutcliffe review in Early Music: "Hunter focuses on Haydn's preoccupation with ‘sound qua sound’ in the quartets (p.123), something so often overlooked in the musicological reception of these works. She also ventures some analysis of texture and role-play, with particular reference to the first movement of op.64 no.2. If she comes too close perhaps to a straightforward equating of melody with (conversational) speech, and therefore of other parts with ‘listening’, she offers a wonderful metaphor for such apparently subordinate roles: they may be understood as ‘the body language of an interlocutor, subtly shaping the main speaker's utterance’ (p.120)."
tagged haydn string_quartet by dkelly ...on 04-JUL-07