Convertible Counterpoint in the Strict Style
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.97 (598 Votes) |
Asin | : | 0828321841 |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 360 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2017-11-04 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
On Tchaikovsky's recommendation, he was made Director of the Conservatory in 1885. His works in-clude four symphonies; one opera, Oresteia; one cantata, John of Damascus; and works for chamber-music. About the Author Serge Ivanovitch Taneiev (1856-1915), pupil, friend, and critic of Tchaikovsky, succeeded the latter as pro-fessor of instrumentation at the Moscow Conservatory, followed Nicholas Rubinstein as chief professor of pi-anoforte. His greatest contribution was in the field of the theory of composition; among his students were Rachmaninoff, Gliere, Scriabin, Siloti, Spendiaroff, Vassilenko and Sabaneiev
Glenda said Major Russian Music Composition Text Now in English!. Serge Ivanovitch Taneiev's Convertible Counterpoint In the Strict Style published in 1909 is now available for the first time in English! The English Translation is of the most distinguished treatise ever written on musical composition. G. Ackley Brower translated the work, known to be the greatest ever written in its . Not for the beginner! R Foose I own and have read a lot of the original 1962 hardcover edition of this book. I found it very interesting in its approach. The author, like Joseph Schillinger, tried to mathematically systematize the creation of music from basic motifs. Unlike Schillinger's two volume study, this work presents a more readily usable sy
This is the first paperpack edition of the English translation of the most distinguished teatise ever written on musical composition. Ackley Brower translated the manual from the original Russian, and Serge Koussevitzky wrote the Introduction.. Convertible Counterpoint in the Strict Style by Serge Taneiev was used as text by many great Russian and western composers of classical music, from Rachmaninoff to Saminsky, to Piston, to Sabaneiev, to Clapp, and Stavinsky. G
On Tchaikovsky's recommendation, he was made Director of the Conservatory in 1885. His greatest contribution was in the field of the theory of composition; among his students were Rachmaninoff, Gliere, Scriabin, Siloti, Spendiaroff, Vassilenko and Sabaneiev . His works in-clude four symphonies; one opera, Oresteia; one cantata, John of Damascus; and works for chamber-music. Serge Ivanovitch Taneiev (1856-1915), pupil, friend, and critic of Tchaik