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Voice Lessons Katherine Bergeron (Professor, Professor, Brown University)

Voice Lessons By Katherine Bergeron (Professor, Professor, Brown University)

Summary

Language, education, politics, and music come together in Katherine Bergeron's Voice Lessons, a study of the French melodie in the Belle Epoque. Close readings of songs by Faure, Debussy, and Ravel, along with poems, sound recordings, and other historical documents, seek to uncovers the cultural meanings of this art: why it emerged, why it mattered, and why it eventually disappeared.

Voice Lessons Summary

Voice Lessons: French Melodie in the Belle Epoque by Katherine Bergeron (Professor, Professor, Brown University)

Language, education, science, and song come together in surprising ways in Katherine Bergeron's new history of music in the Belle Epoque. Voice Lessons examines the modern musical art known as la melodie francaise and its rise to prominence in the years around 1900-a period when France was pouring resources into national literacy and French scholars were beginning to grasp the nuances of the spoken tongue. Bergeron explores the relationship between the free, secular, and compulsory school system of the Third Republic, and the experimental sciences of language that grew alongside it, to observe the ways in which both science and school redefined the verbal arts in France at century's end. The music of Faure, Debussy, and Ravel; the writings of Mallarme, Rimbaud, and Verlaine; the performances of Maggie Teyte, Reynaldo Hahn, and Sarah Bernhardt; the linguistic studies of Paul Passy and Abbe Rousselot: all these sources offer evidence of the new ideas of expression that proliferated during one of the most idealistic moments in French musical history, when poets, composers, actors, singers, and scientists all learned to imagine-and to speak-their language in new ways. Through close readings of songs, poems, sound recordings, and other historical records, Voice Lessons narrates the development of a rare musical art, seeking to explain why this art emerged, why it mattered, and why it eventually disappeared.

Voice Lessons Reviews

Bergeron is no score-dodger and the music is exactly in the right place: central. Surrounding this is a wealth of detail and context opening up bypaths previously unexplored. * Richard Langham Smith, Music and Letters *
excellently researched and illuminating ... this is a book to be reckoned with. It tells its bedtime story eloquently and it approaches its repertory in more detail than elsewhere. * Richard Langham Smith, Music & Letters *

About Katherine Bergeron (Professor, Professor, Brown University)

Katherine Bergeron is Professor and Dean, College of Music, Brown University

Table of Contents

List of Figures ; List of Musical Examples ; Foreword: Telling History ; 1. ; Eve Sings, An Origin Story ; Melody ; Eve Sings ; Muteness ; Oral Pleasures ; Melos and Mimesis ; Mortal Melody ; Perfect prosody, androgynous melody ; Selfless Singers ; NOTES TO CHAPTER ONE ; The Mother Tongue Teaching the modern ABCs ; The People's Mouth L Figures of Speech Talking Machines Indelible Accents ; NOTES TO CHAPTER TWO ; Free Speech, Free Verse, and Music Before All Things ; Poetry and the People Vibrations of Language Accentus/ ad cantus Music After All Transcribing the voix parlee Unsung symbols ; NOTES TO CHAPTER THREE 4. L'Art de dire, or Language in Performance Venetian glass and marqueterie ; Vibrant noise, expressive elegance Dir(e) Expressions lyriques ; Forget that you are singers A Bird in a branch ; NOTES TO CHAPTER FOUR ; 5. Farewell to an Idea ; La verite ; Natural history ; Une voix du passe? ; Realism revisited ; In the shadow of the Faun ; Mirages ; NOTES TO CHAPTER FIVE ; Bibliography

Additional information

GOR013938538
9780195337051
0195337050
Voice Lessons: French Melodie in the Belle Epoque by Katherine Bergeron (Professor, Professor, Brown University)
Used - Like New
Hardback
Oxford University Press Inc
2010-02-18
424
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
The book has been read, but looks new. The book cover has no visible wear, and the dust jacket is included if applicable. No missing or damaged pages, no tears, possible very minimal creasing, no underlining or highlighting of text, and no writing in the margins

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