Classical
Music for Dummies (1st Ed)
Synopsis In a time when school music classes (if they exist
at all) teach their students the finer points of the themes from The Twilight
Zone and Jaws instead of real music; when classical radio stations are
converted to Lite Rock or switched to a "top 100" classical jukebox format;
and when even churches increasingly favor banal "Jesus Is My Boyfriend"-style
slop instead of Bach, Mozart, and Vaughn Williams, classical music may
legitimately be seen as an endangered cultural species. Enter Scott Speck
and David Pogue, who take out the unnecessary mystery, and offer an easy-to-swallow
quickie education, ranging from Gregorian chants to contemporary composers
such as John Adams and John Corigliano. If you can't tell an oboe from
a bassoon, there's also a dandy guide to the instruments of the orchestra,
and once you're through that information you'll know the difference between
a concerto and a sonata. Best of all is the introduction to music theory,
which actually makes a daunting subject seem easy. It's all supported by
a helpful enhanced compact disc (it works in your CD-ROM drive; it plays
on your stereo's CD player) containing more than an hour of representative
musical tidbits from good EMI recordings. Although the tone is unremittingly
flippant and the jokes are, for the most part, pretty bad, Classical Music
for Dummies is one of the better works in this series, and really does
provide a useful reference for a subject too often seen as arcane.
Norton
Anthology of Western Music:Ancient to Baroque
You might also find the following books essential to your music library:
Norton
Anthology of Western Music:Classic to Modern by Claude V. Palisca
A
History of Western Music by Donald Jay Grout, Claude V. Palisca
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