Ethnic Piano Rolls in the United States

Ethnic Piano Rolls in the United States

Author: Darius Kučinskas

Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing

Published: 2021-05-19

Total Pages: 199

ISBN-13: 152756987X

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‘Ethnic’ piano rolls are an important part of a still-neglected musical heritage. Having come to prominence in the first part of the twentieth century, they encapsulate the musical life of several continents and various ethnic communities based in the USA. This volume represents the latest research on these unique and rare cultural artefacts.


Off the Record

Off the Record

Author: Neal Peres Da Costa

Publisher: OUP USA

Published: 2012-05-16

Total Pages: 396

ISBN-13: 0195386914

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In Off the Record, author and pianist Neal Peres Da Costa explores Romantic-era performance practices through a range of early sound recordings--acoustic, piano roll and electric--that capture a generation of highly-esteemed pianists trained as far back as the mid-nineteenth-century.


Lost Genius

Lost Genius

Author: Kevin Bazzana

Publisher: McClelland & Stewart

Published: 2009-02-24

Total Pages: 394

ISBN-13: 1551991845

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The award-winning author of Wondrous Strange, the critically acclaimed biography of Glenn Gould, explores the bizarre, untold life of another brilliant and eccentric musician. The composer Arnold Schoenberg called him an “utterly extraordinary” pianist of “incredible originality and conviction,” yet today he is all but forgotten. Born in Budapest in 1903, Ervin Nyiregyházi (nyeer-edge-hah-zee) was a remarkable prodigy: at eight he performed at Buckingham Palace, and when he was thirteen a psychologist published a book about him. In his teens, his idiosyncratic, intensely Romantic playing electrified audiences and astounded critics in Europe and America. But his adult career quickly foundered, and he was reduced to penury. In 1928, he settled in Los Angeles, and eventually he withdrew from public life, preferring to spend his time quietly composing. Psychologically, he remained a child, and found the ordinary demands of daily life onerous — he struggled even to dress himself. He drank heavily, was insatiable sexually (he married ten times), and described himself as “a fortissimo bastard,” yet such was his talent and charisma that he numbered among his friends and champions celebrities such as Jack Dempsey, Theodore Dreiser, Bela Lugosi, and Gloria Swanson. Rediscovered in the 1970s, he enjoyed a brief, sensational, and controversial renaissance before slipping back into obscurity. He died in 1987. Lost Genius, the product of ten years’ research, is the first biography of Nyiregyházi, whose story is among the most fascinating — and bizarre — in twentieth-century music.


A Century of Recorded Music

A Century of Recorded Music

Author: Timothy Day

Publisher: Yale University Press

Published: 2000-01-01

Total Pages: 340

ISBN-13: 9780300094015

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Looks at the history of recording technology and its effect on music, including artistic performance, listening habits, and audience participation.


Player Piano

Player Piano

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 2002

Total Pages:

ISBN-13: 9780795302565

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Kurt Vonnegut?s first novel Player Piano, published in 1952, heralded the beginning of one of the most diverting and provocative adventures in modern American fiction. Vonnegut went on to write novels that perhaps had greater formal skill and technique, but Player Piano is a tour de force of imaginative insight into modern life and a shrewd satire of American progress.


The Piano

The Piano

Author: Robert Palmieri

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2004-06-01

Total Pages: 964

ISBN-13: 1135949638

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The Encyclopedia of the Piano was selected in its first edition as a Choice Outstanding Book and remains a fascinating and unparalleled reference work. The instrument has been at the center of music history with even composers of large symphonic work asserting that they do not write anything without sketching it out first on a piano; its limitations and expressive capacity have done much to shape the contours of the western musical idiom. Within the scope of this user-friendly guide is everything from the acoustics and construction of the piano to the history of the companies that have built them. The piano-lover might also be surprised to find an entry for Thomas Jefferson, and will no doubt read intently the passages about the changing history of the piano's place in the home. Uniformly well-written and authoritative, this guide will channel anyone's love for the instrument, through social, intellectual, art history and beyond into the electronic age.


Player Piano

Player Piano

Author: Arthur A. Reblitz

Publisher: Vestal Press

Published: 1997-01-01

Total Pages: 227

ISBN-13: 1461664470

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A treatise on how player pianos function, and how to get them back into top playing condition if they don't work. For beginners and experienced technicians alike.