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Making Music Modern

New York in the 1920s

Carol J Oja author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc

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New York City witnessed a dazzling burst of creativity in the 1920s. In this pathbreaking study, Carol J. Oja explores this artistic renaissance from the perspective of composers of classical and modern music, who along with writers, painters, and jazz musicians, were at the heart of early modernism in America. She also illustrates how the aesthetic attitudes and institutional structures from the 1920s left a deep imprint on the arts over the 20th century. Aaron Copland, George Gershwin, Ruth Crawford Seeger, Virgil Thomson, William Grant Still, Edgard Varèse, Henry Cowell, Carl Ruggles, Marion Bauer, Dane Rudhyar--these were the leaders of a talented new generation of American composers whose efforts made New York City the center of new music in the country. They founded composer societies--such as the International Composers' Guild, the League of Composers, the Pan American Association, and the Copland-Sessions Concerts--to promote the performance of their music, and they nimbly negotiated cultural boundaries, aiming for recognition in Western Europe as much as at home. They showed exceptional skill at marketing their work. Drawing on extensive archival material--including interviews, correspondence, popular periodicals, and little-known music manuscripts--Oja provides a new perspective on the period and a compelling collective portrait of the figures, puncturing many longstanding myths. American composers active in New York during the 1920s are explored in relation to the "Machine Age" and American Dada; the impact of spirituality on American dissonance; the crucial, behind-the-scenes role of women as patrons and promoters of modernist music; cross-currents between jazz and concert music; the critical reception of modernist music (especially in the writings of Carl Van Vechten and Paul Rosenfeld); and the international impulse behind neoclassicism. The book also examines the persistent biases of the time, particularly anti-Semitisim, gender stereotyping, and longstanding racial attitudes.

In its rich accumulation of detail, its overlapping and sometimes conflicting perspectives, and its occasional confusion of the substantial and the imaginary, Oja's book on New York is a mirror of its wonderful subject ... Making Music Modern will be for many readers a bridge to an enticing new world. * Music and Letters *
One of the admirable features of this book is that Oja avoids the trap into which many well-meaning studies fall: the assumption that music history is shaped entirely by composers. * Music and Letters *
As befits its subject, it is teeming with names and events and packed with information: any reader, no matter how specialist, will learn new things ... The author's evident love for the New York of those years is stamped on every page, and her enthusiasm for its musical legacy is infectious. * Music and Letters *
Carol J. Oja's wise, witty and compulsively readable book, Making Music Modern: New York in the 1920's, looks back at the formation of the experimental, traditionalist and populist strains in today's New York with a critical yet sympathetic sense of the mixture of idealism and hucksterism that still prevails. Carol Oja writes short chapters that are narrowly and precisely focused rather than comprehensive. The result might be likened to a comic strip, that most post-modern of narrative forms, and the form fits the content. * David Schiff, Times Literary Supplement *

  • Winner of Winner, Lowens Book Award, Society for American Music.

ISBN: 9780195058499

Dimensions: 152mm x 229mm x 32mm

Weight: 912g

512 pages