Music: A Monthly Magazine, Devoted to the Art, Science, Technic and Literature of Music, Volume 15W. S. B. Mathews, 1899 - Music |
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Page 1
... complete form , as seventh or ninth , constitutes a strongly appealing combination of tones required to be fol- lowed by something else ; concerning which something else , however , nature gives no information or suggestion . In spite ...
... complete form , as seventh or ninth , constitutes a strongly appealing combination of tones required to be fol- lowed by something else ; concerning which something else , however , nature gives no information or suggestion . In spite ...
Page 3
... complete absence of the perceptions of melody , and this is indeed largely the case . In a nation whose musical instru- ment was the harp , with the long , not very tense , string , as was the case with the ancient Egyptians , and only ...
... complete absence of the perceptions of melody , and this is indeed largely the case . In a nation whose musical instru- ment was the harp , with the long , not very tense , string , as was the case with the ancient Egyptians , and only ...
Page 10
... complete and beautiful example . By the year 1400 the art of counterpoint as we now have it had begun to assume form . Canonic imitation began in Paris nearly two hundred years earlier and by degrees during this period composers had ...
... complete and beautiful example . By the year 1400 the art of counterpoint as we now have it had begun to assume form . Canonic imitation began in Paris nearly two hundred years earlier and by degrees during this period composers had ...
Page 20
... complete literary writings ) , and in his transcriptions of a number of the songs , he showed the deepest sympathies for the Franz muse . I often wonder whether Liszt will ever be accorded the fuli measure of his worth , and the ...
... complete literary writings ) , and in his transcriptions of a number of the songs , he showed the deepest sympathies for the Franz muse . I often wonder whether Liszt will ever be accorded the fuli measure of his worth , and the ...
Page 36
... complete interpretation . It is by a most vulgar and empirical proceeding of imitation that is purely me- chanical , with which intelligence , taste , sentiment or spon- taneity have absolutely nothing to do . From this it results that ...
... complete interpretation . It is by a most vulgar and empirical proceeding of imitation that is purely me- chanical , with which intelligence , taste , sentiment or spon- taneity have absolutely nothing to do . From this it results that ...
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American composers arpeggio Arthur Foote artist audience Bach beautiful Beethoven Boston Brahms Chicago Chopin chords chorus Club compositions concert Conservatory David Bispham Dwight effect Emil Sauer entirely exercises expression Felix Weingartner flat fugue German Gewandhaus give given Godowsky grade Hall hand harmony hear heard idea instrument interesting Leipzig Liszt Mason master measures melody Mendelssohn ment minor Miss modern movement Mozart musicians nature never notes octave opera opus oratorio orchestra organ overture Paganini pedal performance Persian Garden pianist piano playing pianoforte pieces player practice prelude present produced pupils quartette recital rhythm Richard Strauss scale Schumann selections singers singing solo soloist sonata songs soprano sound success symphony teacher teaching technic theme things tion tone violin virtuoso vocal voice W. S. B. Mathews Wagner White Russia writer young