Heartland Excursions
Ethnomusicological Reflections on Schools of Music
Format:Paperback
Publisher:University of Illinois Press
Published:1st Feb '95
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
One of today's foremost ethnomusicologists takes the reader along for a delightful, wide-ranging tour of his workplace
One of the ethnomusicologists takes the reader along for a tour of his workplace.
In Heartland Excursions, a legendary ethnomusicologist takes the reader along for a delightful, wide-ranging tour of his workplace. Bruno Nettl provides an insightful, sometimes tongue-in-cheek, always pithy ethnography of midwestern university schools of music from a different perspective in each of four chapters, alternating among three distinct voices: the longtime professor, the "native informant," and the outside observer, an "ethnomusicologist from Mars."
If you've ever been to a concert or been connected to a university with a school of music, you ll discover yourself--or someone you know--in these pages.
"In the music building you can't tell the quick from the dead without a program."--Chapter 1, "In the Service of the Masters"
"The great ability of a violin student whom I observed was established when his dean was persuaded to accompany him."--Chapter 2, "Society of Musicians"
"Some teachers of music history would accuse students who listen to Elvis Presley not only of taking time away from hearing Brahms, but also of polluting themselves."--Chapter 3, "A Place for All Musics?"
At commencement, the graduates "were perhaps not aware that they had just participated in an event in which the principal values of the Western musical world . . . had been taken out of storage bins for annual exercise."--Chapter 4, "Forays into the Repertory"
"Approaches schools of music as geographic spaces in which the population interacts in a unique network of relationships defined by the knowledge of music." -- Choice
ISBN: 9780252064685
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 15mm
Weight: 286g
192 pages