Ear | Wave | Event, 1 (2014)
Filed under journal | Tags: · art, art history, listening, music, music history, sound, sound art

Ear │ Wave │ Event is a web publication founded and edited by Bill Dietz and Woody Sullender. Its premiere issue contains essays “theoretically framing problems of sonic thinking and articulation (by Peter Ablinger, Amy Cimini & Woody Sullender, Sean Griffin, Jessica Feldman, G Douglas Barrett & Lindsey Lodhie) along with a battery of alternative genealogies for musical practice and thought offering ways out of what feels more and more like the dead-lock of the “sound” scene (Matt Marble, Marina Rosenfeld, Dima Strakovsky, Sean Griffin, Catherine Christer Hennix, Peter Ablinger).” (from the Introduction)
Comment (0)eContact! 15(4): Videomusic: Overview of an Emerging Art Form (2014) [English, French]
Filed under journal | Tags: · art, art history, audiovisual, cinema, electroacoustic music, film, image, music, music history, painting, sound, video, visual music

Videomusic is a field of practice that could be seen as a subset of visual music, a term which can be considered today to be familiar enough to speak for itself. This broader area of artistic activity includes digital work, cinema, painting and visual “instruments”, and dates back at least to the 18th century.
Contributions by Maura McDonnell, Patrick Saint-Denis, Inés Wickmann, Joseph Hyde and Jean Piché, Laurie Radford, Nicolas Wiese, Claudia Robles-Angel, Diego Garro, Andrew Lewis, Jon Weinel and Stuart Cunningham, and David Candler. Interviews by Bob Gluck with Mario Davidovsky, Alfredo Del Mónaco and Sergio Cervetti, alcides lanza, and Edgar Valcárcel.
Editor jef chippewa
Publisher Canadian Electroacoustic Community, Montreal, April 2014
View online (English, HTML articles)
View online (French, HTML articles)
Charles Rosen: Arnold Schoenberg (1975)
Filed under book | Tags: · biography, composition, expressionism, music, music history, music theory, serialism

In this lucid, revealing book, pianist and scholar Charles Rosen sheds light on the elusive music of Arnold Schoenberg and his challenge to conventional musical forms. Rosen argues that Schoenberg’s music, with its atonality and dissonance, possesses a rare balance of form and emotion, making it, according to Rosen, “the most expressive music ever written.” Concise and accessible, this book will appeal to fans, non-fans, and scholars of Schoenberg, and to those who have yet to be introduced to the works of one of the greatest composers of the twentieth century.
Publisher Viking Press, New York, 1975
ISBN 06701331617
113 pages
Review (Joel Sachs, The Musical Quarterly, 1977)
Review (Joseph Horowitz, Music Journal, 1976)
Review (Robert Craft, The New York Times, 1975)
PDF (17 MB, no OCR)
More works by and on Schoenberg (Monoskop wiki)