Genres Books


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Genres Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Genres
The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee (Piano/Vocal/Chords)
Published in Paperback by Alfred Publishing (2006-01-05)
Author:
List price: $22.95
New price: $18.36
Collectible price: $22.99

Average review score:

VERY quick!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-28
Product came just as described (discounted b/c of folded corners) and came EXTREMELY quickly! thank you!

Spelling Bee
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-28
I am very happy with this book. I includes everything except the finales, goodbyes, and My Favorite Moment of the Bee (Rona's solos) the piano part is accompaniment and doesn't have the melody in the piano part. It's definitely worth the $21.95!

Great purchase!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-06
The songs aren't too difficult to play, and they're all great. I only wish they had included more music from the show!

Great (G-R-E-A-T) Book as well as great music!!! (M-U-S-I-C)
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-10
The music for the funniest musical in years is now available!!! This book contains every song for the show except for the transitions (Goodbyes/Favorite Moments of the Bee/Spelling Rules) and contains more than just solo numbers! This show has music for that is all within range of anybody's voice and can be used for auditioning as well as performing!

Last I checked this book is not available in any store, this is definitely a great Amazon buy for any vocalist and will never be regretted by the buyer!

Your Word Is Stupendous.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-23
Although the information above is wrong, (the book is 102 pages) this book is worth far more than the $21.95, they're asking for. True to form, William Finn keeps putting out comprehensive songbooks with exciting arrangements of his music dramas. The lyrics in 25th Annual are a bit more rational than his exercises in stream-of-consciousness poeticism like Falsettos or A New Brain, but Finn continues to be a hilarious, accomplished lyricist. Although I was disappointed at the omission of the reprises and a few finales, overall, I was quite pleased with this book, and I recommend it to auditioners, amateur musical theatre actors, or simply fans of the show.

The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee spells out one thing for sure: F-U-N.

Genres
The Ahrens & Flaherty Songbook: Piano/Vocal/chords
Published in Paperback by Alfred Publishing Company (2001-02)
Author:
List price: $19.95
New price: $12.88
Used price: $14.65
Collectible price: $18.95

Average review score:

But You Need To Proofread Your Own Page
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-19
You show the composer of this collection, not as the brilliant Stephen Flaherty, but as P.I. Tchaikowsky. Just checking to see if we're paying attention?

A and E Songbook
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-23
I've always been a fan of their musicals and this makes teaching so much easier than trying to find copies of their individual works.

Wonderful Collection! First rate all the way!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-23
I am a musical theatre student and am performing 2-3 new songs per week. In my quest for music books containing a substantial amount of fantastic music, I struck gold with this one. All of the songs in here have wonderful accompaniment, some simple, some more difficult. I HIGHLY RECOMMEND THIS COLLECTION!!!!

This book is filled with plenty of great audition tunes
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-20
I got this book so I could have sheet music for musical auditions. It's a great book to have if you're a musical performer or simply just a lover of Ahrens and Flaherty's tunes and plays (i.e. Once on This Island). It's a great addition to my theatrical and musical archive.

Nice
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-22
This is a nice book with selections from Seussical, Anastasia (the animated film), Ragtime, Once on this Island, The Glorious Ones, My Favorite Year, A Man of No Importance, and Lucky Stiff. Songs are All Those Christmas Cliches (no source credited), Alone in the Universe, At the Beginning, Back to Before, Come Down from the Tree, How Lucky You Are, The Human Heart, I Was Here, If the World Were Like the Movies, It's Possible, Journey to the Past, Larger Than Life, Love Who You Love, Make Them Hear You, Mama Will Provide, New Music, Oh the Thinks You Can Think, Once Upon a December, Our Children, Ragtime, Solla Sollew, Streets of Dublin, Times Like This, Waiting for Life, Wheels of a Dream.

Genres
aka McGuire
Published in Paperback by Beaver's Pond Press (2007-08-03)
Author: Janet Entzel
List price: $17.95
New price: $11.22
Used price: $9.99

Average review score:

Aka McGuire
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-15
Sean Byrnes has everyone fooled. He has found the perfect con and the irony is just too much. Here he is in Arizona, serving as prison psychologist under the name of Dr. Charles McGuire. The real McGuire, the prison psychologist that assured that Sean served out his full sentence, remains undiscovered in the trunk of his car.

The real beauty of the situation is that no one will be even looking for the real McGuire for at least a month. The doctor was starting his sabbatical, taking time off after the death of his wife. This leaves the impostor free to use the good doctor's credit cards and good name to his advantage.

Aka McGuire leads the reader on a merry chase, wondering how, when, and even if this killer is going to be found out and brought to justice. There are so many times when the characters are startled by the odd behavior of this man but write these acts off as stress or grief. Mostly, these individuals just see what they want and ignore anything that could cast doubt on the fine reputation of Dr. Charles McGuire.

Page turner!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-21
This is a must-read for any murder-mystery fan. Ms Entzel's characters are interesting and leave you wanting more. I agree, this is a shoe-in for a series. If you like Grafton, Evanovich, and Cornwell, you'll love this book. Bring on the next one! :)

A 5-Star Debut Mystery
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-18
Reviewed by Patricia E. Reid

Be careful who you trust is a lesson Katherine (Kitt) Logan learns the hard way. In the process, she puts herself in danger as well as her employees and friends.

Kitt's car breaks down on the highway outside of Empalme, Arizona. Eddie stops and gives her a lift into town and introduces her to the local mechanic. Eddie also invites her to the Carlita's Cantina in town for a drink and eventually invites Kitt to stay over in his house until her car repairs are completed. Eddie has a lovely home as well as a ranch outside of town. Eddie advises Kitt not to divulge that she is the warden at the prison in Florence. People in Empalme tend to be suspicious of people in law enforcement.

During Kitt's stay in Empalme she discovers a body in the cemetery while out for an evening's stroll. This particular body does not belong in this cemetery since it is just buried in a shallow grave and covered with a few rocks. Sheriff Martinez is called and an investigation begins to find out the name of the victim.

Kitt's car is repaired and she returns to her home and husband Cord. The first day back at the prison, Kitt discovers that the doctor is having problems due to a lack of a psychiatrist on duty at the prison. A new psychiatrist has been hired but will not be on site for at least another month. Kitt remembers a Dr. McGuire that she met in the Cantina. Dr. McGuire stated that he was staying there briefly to work on some research. Kitt contacts Dr. McGuire and he agrees to work at the prison temporarily until the new doctor is ready to fill the position.

The relief Kitt feels with Dr. McGuire's acceptance is short-lived. Although Dr. McGuire has plenty of experience in prisons, it is as an inmate and not as a doctor. The real doctor McGuire is dead.

I would place this book at the very top of my list of good books read this year. It is a very exciting book and I held my breath to see how the story would end for all involved with aka McGuire.

Armchair Interview says: Top-of-list book is a good recommendation for any mystery lover.

Awesome Plot!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-05
The intrigue and suspense was tempered with wit and humor! I sense a sequel (I hope) as both main characters seem to be just beginning to bloom. I couldn't put it down once I started. I hope Entzel is formulating her next book, I'm anxious for more!

Excellent murder mystery!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-25
From the first page to the last page, suspense is everywhere. Entzel does a great job weaving a tangled web that isn't illuminated until the end. I couldn't put it down. Never knew what was next. This is a great murder mystery with loads of suspense!

Genres
Alter Sphere: Megamorphis
Published in Hardcover by Unlimited Publishing (2001-10)
Author: Sandy S. Ayala
List price: $22.99
New price: $9.99
Used price: $4.99

Average review score:

Alter Sphere Megamorphis
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-08
I am not a Science Fiction person. To me Alter Sphere is more of an action/adventure. A real kick ass adventure. I found myself unable to put it down, and didn't untill I finished.

Sandy S.Ayala has humor...adventure...suspense...action...sex all in one cracherjack book. Would make a good TV series or movie.

An adventurous science fiction novel
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-05
Megamorphis by Sandy S. Ayala is an adventurous science fiction novel of Sarah and her disintegrating marriage and the fantasy world and mate she consequently creates in her head which transforms into an amazing planetary shelter. Sarah's journey through wonders and psyche, and more, as well as her fateful meeting with an imperfect yet utterly human rescuer, ultimately lead to an amazing destination of wonder and self-realization in this forceful written tale of the power of the mind. Megamorphis is confidently recommended to the community of science fiction enthusiasts as a unique, imaginative, and thoroughly entertaining story from beginning to end.

Sandy Ayala MEGA Hit
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-22
Being a slow reader and easily distracted, i had to go to Sadona AZ, to get ingrossed in the story.What I like best about this book, however, is that it encourages a love even though you have made a mistake with one Marriage. without ever letting the reader know it is doing so. The wonderful tongue-rolling combination of words, the silly (but not really) images the words evoke, and the simple joy in every Day Dreamer are tailor-made to enchant a Reader and encourage him or her to read more.Sandy has a hit and if this is a spin from her Life she's captured the very essence of a Love-Thriller.

Highly recommended!!

Among the best books ever
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-22
Sandy S. Ayala weaves an unforgettable tale of love, courage, action, and the ability to trust in yourself. This is a science fiction book set in the future.After chemical warfare destroys the world, Sarah sets out with the man of her dreams and an unusual crew on a thrilling adventure. I can't wait for the next book! Young Adult+

Mega Supenseful !!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-13
In her imaginative, yet realistic style, Sandy blends a fantastic combination of reality and fantasy. Her characters hit close to home with their emotion, imagination, attitudes, and expression. Her blend of fantasy and reality creates a world unlike any written before.

Sandy's writing brings out the best of human perseverance when faced with immeasurable odds. Ms. Ayala paints a fantastic picture of a world born again. With witty dialogue and characters that readers can very much relate to in their mind eye, it's a book readers of all adults young or Old are sure to treasure in their Library. Isaac, or Gene would have liked Her style.

Genres
Anatomy of the Orchestra
Published in Hardcover by University of California Press (1981-12-15)
Author: Norman Del Mar
List price: $65.00
Used price: $92.19
Collectible price: $257.92

Average review score:

Everyone Buy it!
Helpful Votes: 23 out of 24 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-04
Anyone with a more than passing interest in Orchestral music should try this one. Especially good for young players in school or civic orchestras. It desecribes what everyone's job is, how they play different effects, hangups, foibles, etc...

Tells you why Horns don't like sitting in front of percussion. Why the tympanist won't play other percussion, but the the rest of the kitchen dept is running around playing 3 and four different instruments.

It talks a lot about keys, notes, and has many copies of the score for illustration, but if you don't read music don't despair... your enjoyment should not be diminished.

When to disagree with the conductor...

And describes the curious relations amongst all those infighting violins.

possibly orchestration; thing of the scraps of history
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-01
I doubt if you can really teach orchestration,like composition; for whatever you are doing is simply revisiting in rote formations of what has already been done, and what has already been done, and what already has been done should be heard in its original form anyway. A book that merely speaks and addresses problems is the most virulent, viable route, I think, Give me what's the most resonant parts of the instrument,tell me where that is please! also tell me what is rather dull, what is noise-like, and what "lays" best in what register.Then how do we come to mix timbres? who can tell you that if you have an original vision for your music,if you write music, If you have many friends who play all the instruments of the orchestra that's the best route as well, real live expositions cannot be replaced by a text.Learning orchestration is about someone being there to ask questions on why you did what you did, and why you didn't do it another way! Texts are merely stepping stones anyway, unless you got "axes" to grind as Gunther Schuller.(incorreect tempi)
Seasoned conductor Del Mar at least has other interesting books on Brahms and Beethoven and potpourris of other lesser knowns on the problems of conducting and indirectly exposing the problems that exist within the orchestral repertoire.This is a facet of orchestration often overlooked. Everyone had some problem at some time that needs to be corrected by an experienced conductor. For if you simply play the music exactly as written it would be rather boring,unispired; how does one explain the phenomenon of; take five conductors, each rehearsing the same piece with the same orcehstra, and you will get/render five different conceptions of timbre, gestural differences, rhythm, balance and meaning. So music breathes I guess, and an orcehstration book will only tell you what to put into the right or wrong pegs in the systems of notations. Orchestrations, the orchestra itself is/are becoming reaching a dinosaur status, with commissioning funds drying up; or only reserved to academia-bound prize winners. Especially now since some orchestras are resorting to playing film music,with the film in the back or not; as interesting as that is, the orchestrations of the cinema have a kind of fixed entity, a horizon you can see, and who would rather listen to music for "Forrest Gump"? than brilliant orcehstrators as Stravinsky or Boulez, or Eotvos, Berio or Xenakis, or Sciarrino.Learning to write film music is not learning about the orchestra, for there still needs someone to develop its timbre, otherwise it dies. This is a good book nonethless, Del Mar has marvelous insights into problems with ample examples not overdone/overdetermined as the Berlioz-Strauss.I learned orcehstration simply by looking at the best (those mentioned above) and re-translating that into whatever I thought I could see as my music,my timbre, or conception of sound.

Best orchestration book
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-04
Great book for music lovers, proffessional musicians and composers. Gives you a real insight into the orchestra and individual instruments. Practical and well written. Highly recommended.

Very goood Book
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-13
This is an elemental resources for all advanced students of composition and conducting.

A Musicians Must
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-25
This is a well-written and thought-out text about the modern day symphony orchestra. It provides and analysis of every instrument in the orchestra, it's purposes, the sound it produces, and the possibilities. Norman Del Mar's book is a must for music students and professionals alike.

Genres
Arcana: Musicians on Music
Published in Paperback by Granary Books (2000-01-02)
Author:
List price: $34.95
New price: $21.92
Used price: $21.83

Average review score:

The Classic Guide to Strategy
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-29
As John Zorn outlines in his introduction to the book, he assembled this project as a reaction to the lack of insightful critical writing about the generation of adventurous musicians he is a part of. This group of artists and their work is not easily defined, although critics have tried applying ambiguous terms like 'comprovisation,' 'postmodernism,' and 'totalism." Anyone familiar with the output of record labels like Tzadik, Avant, Atavistic, and Knitting Factory will recognize several names among the contributors. Unlike the usual music essay which dissects an artist's recordings, most of these are very informal and intriguing peeks into the thought processes and compositional practices of the musicians themselves. Bill Frisell provides an approach to guitar fingering, Marc Ribot talks about earplugs, Ikue Mori discusses how she works with drum machines, and Bob Ostertag details how he adapted the sounds of a queer riot for string quartet. There's a discussion on plunderphonics with John Oswald, an overview from Elliott Sharp on his group Carbon, and David Mahler expounds his responses to a set of nine questions posed by Pauline Oliveros. The writings range from brief 2 or 3 page entries (Mike Patton's "How We Eat Our Young," Marilyn Crispell's "Elements of Improvisation") to long and elaborate essays (Scott Johnson's "Counterpoint," David Rosenboom's "Propositional Music"). Some of the contributions are more unusual, such as Zorn's "Treatment for a Film in Fifteen Scenes," Fred Frith's notebook extracts, or Peter Garland's journal of his trip to Australia's Northern Territory. All of them provide for inspiring and thought-provoking reading, making this an invaluable book for both fans of these artists and aspiring musicians of the avant garde. An appendix of brief bios for each artist ends the book, along with short lists of recommended listenings.

Arcana: Musicians On Music
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 26 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-10
This is an excellent book, with brilliant music contributors like Marc Ribot, Fred Frith, Mike Patton, Bill Frisell, and many others (mostly Tzadik/John Zorn related musicians) - a must read for the contemporary musician/composer, and for those who listen to and appreciate the music of John Zorn.

Glimpses
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-07
Arcana is a book that you will go back to again and again.Whether it is to look at Fred Friths notes on composing and playing ( great fun for Frithophiles deciphering the music involved)or the fingering techniques of Bill Frissel this is a book that inspires the act of making music.All of the contributors have uncovered some real gems and John Zorn has done a great job editing this book.
This is not a how to book by any means, in fact Arcana offers far more than that.This is a what if book, a glimpse rather than a map.
If you are a musician I feel you will find lots of things in this book to inspire, and for music fans we have a history of sorts that I am sure will enrich your listening pleasure.
Highly reccomended.

Musical Manifesto
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-30
This collection of essays, notes, scores and proclamations of artistic vision serves as an amazing "manifesto" for the Downtown New York improvised/avant music scene. Edited by Maven John Zorn, the text features contributions from guitarist Bill Frisell and trombonist George Lewis (both of whom, along with Zorn, released the wonderful "News for Lulu" LPs in the late 80's and early 90's) among others. A definite must-have for a fan of this scene, free/avant Jazz, or music in general.

We need more words! in the avant-garde not sounds.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-03
largely this is a oblique promo book for Zorn & Company,and other CD labels Tzadik,Hat Art, RecRec, Avant,Atavista etc., as already noted in other reviews, well the avant-garde gotta survive, some do and some don't.
Some are erased from history,
Most of the contributors here play outta The NYC Big Apple,anyway,although writers were selected from all over.It'll be interesting now to see how the cultural scene in NYC develops in light of the World Trade Bombings,especially the free improvisors.
Zorn's a good editor,however, and books like this bring a sense of solidarity in what remains a asymmetrical culture, with no one knowing what each other does and responds to. The musical world is notorious for this social/cultural fragmentation.
I suppose George Lewis,who doesn't now live in Chicago represents the Midwest since his long time,'lontano' long ago association as a kid with Chicago's own AACM. Well that don't cut it.There are other in Chicago who contribute greatly to the scene as the CUBE Ensemble,and Chicago free improvisors. I guess we should get our own promo book.
Garland,Ochs,Rosenboom represents the West Coast, Yeah I guess!Bill Frisell offered renderings on different guitar fingerings was useful, although quite brief,like something he wrote on the bus on the way to the Gig.Likewise Guy Klucevek,Accordeonist/composer as well added some notes,real music notes,I never read anything he wrote,but again something on timbral poossibilities of the Squeeze Box for composers might have been incredibly useful. and,pianists S.Drury and Marilyn Crispell should of talked more about how they play,they play great!, and varied,I'd like to know in print what excites? them why they choose the music they do?, Yes we all know why they choose it, but a little explanation for us unwashed- dispossessed out here who pluck down our Bucks to buy the stuff would have been helpful, a little.

Larry Orchs of Rova Sax Quartet, gets into it, ya might think its pedantic to give licks, noodles and fragments of it, as he does but its a world of use,I sat down ans played all of it, loved it.
Some get into philosophy and the results are abysmal like David Rosenboom's shibboleths,too much science sometimes is a bad thing, and he's a great contributer to the electronic thinking of music,computer base pieces,But I'd rather read Kristeva,Derrida,Baudrillard,or Habermas on the Public Sphere if I wanted to read philosphy.But there was a practical side to his essay on the idea of propositional music.
A bit more useful was Miya Masaoka "Notes from a Trans-Cultural Diary". Since the real operative term is multi-culturalism not postmodernity, this was infinitely useful to read other persepctives, and means of performing and improvising with non-Western instruments.

The most political here was Pauline Oliveros's Questions answered by David Mahler, on how we all survive??, what our music is suppose to do???, how happy are we with the results??, who listens to our stuff?, all this throws quite directly the political question into the discursive/dialogue mix. Whom do we Serve? I believe Rzewski asked many many years ago.
There's also some neat goin exegetical excursions into the real sound timbre experience as Elliott Sharp's CARBONic History, Hey man whatever floats yer boat.
I know it's easy/facile playing 'Monday Morning Quarterback-Composer', But there was nothing on the Voice,Diamanda Galas,or Anna Homler,or Carol Genetti,should have written,scribbled something for this.
Peter Garland,the man of the Desert, is always interesting to read, another who has the guts of throwing the political question into the mix. Since Mickey Mouse and Bill Gates won the Revolution, he has some great stuff to say.
I think there should be more writing like this,no matter what the price, Again the greatest observations of Oliveros is that the avant-garde should serve itself first, we should all help each other work at each other's music,Yeah Right! Well not in this best of all possible Worlds.But it's a neat profound concept to contemplate
I think Charitable behemoths might loosen up on their tight purses for more writing emanating from improvisors,pianists,thinkers,composers,conceptualists, as those in 'Arcana' here,of course, ya all have to learn how to wryite, not like me,ee,Charitable people like to hold onto the objects they throw bucks at(not their's) than the music they will never hear, nor go to a conceert anyways,Music is toooo much part of the ether,rareified air,and it's all part of the hypocrisy we all live by and with.

Genres
Arnold Schoenberg's Journey
Published in Paperback by Harvard University Press (2003-05-30)
Author: Allen Shawn
List price: $20.50
New price: $20.50
Used price: $10.40
Collectible price: $24.95

Average review score:

a wonderful, sympathetic view
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-10
Allen Shawn's book is clearly a labor of love. This is remarkable, given that Schoenberg is notoriously difficult to love! I strongly recommend the book to anyone interested in one of the most influential composers of all time. Shawn is a composer, and presents careful treatments of several major compositions, complete with excerpts from the scores. He includes some fascinating biographical information, but the focus is the music. Schoenberg pioneered "atonal" music in the years right around 1910 parallel to Kandinsky's pioneering abstract painting, and in fact the two were friends and collaborators. Here is an amazing quote from Schoenberg:

"It has never been the purpose and effect of new art to suppress the old, its predecessor, certainly not to destroy it. ... The appearance of the new can far better be compared with the flowering of a tree: it is the natural growth of the tree of life. But if there were trees that had an interest in preventing the flowering, then they would surely call it revolution. And conservatives of winter would fight against each spring. ... Short memory and meager insight suffice to confuse growth with overthrow." (p. 141)

i like this book
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-01
This marvellous book evoked the sense of excitement/bemusement at encountering Schoenberg's music for the first time but also prompted me to investigate works which in the past i'd not given sufficent attention.
Here's a few scattered quotes of what he has to say about 'Die Gluckliche Hand':
'that the representation of the unattainable is embodied in music that is itself dense and tangled is no accident.Although it is beautifully imagined and so headlong in its progress that it seems shorter than it is......yet it is precise in its intricacy,and the orchestration is lush and full of colour' pg.158

The moments of analyis are always free of technical jargon and i like the attention given to Schoenberg's painting as a means of illumination.Altogether a compelling read and well illustrated.

The possible drawbacks are minor:
for my liking,there are too many references to Robert Craft, and i don't understand what Shawn means when he describes Wagner as being earthbound in comparison with early Schoenberg(the prelude to Parsifal being one of the most weightless pieces of music i know).Also,i have a special affection for that most ravishing of choral works 'Friede auf Erden' op.13 so was sad to find no reference to this little gem.

But please,go out and buy this book.It's got just the right tone of voice.Supplement with Rosen's more dense but equally thoughtful book.

Great Composer, Great Book
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-15
I don't understand musical notation, but when Mr. Shawn goes into detail, his inspiration is transmitted to me, and I want to go hear the work.

Schoenberg is tough, true. But I hope people will read this book and see he was human and passionate.

It's really silly that I haven't had the opportunity to hear one of the greatest composer's music in concert. Will that change?

With more advocates such as Mr. Shawn, I can hope so.

A great book
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-06
Thank you, Allen Shawn, for putting Arnold Schoenberg in the light that he deserves to be viewed in.

An attempt at a more "superficial treatment" of Schoenberg...
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-06
Schoenberg's music gets treated at times like no more than a necessary intellectual evil: "Ok! Ok! Tonal centers aren't the only musical expressive form! We get it! Now can we please get back to beautiful life-affirming melodies and harmonies?!?!" The music often gets treated from only a theoretical viewpoint, and many people read about Schoenberg, or worse, read opinions about his music, before really experiencing the music itself. In this sense the music doesn't get a chance to live and breathe on its own without an angorra-thick layer of theory and sometimes obscure and opaque musicology heaped over it. The author of this book states this idea very eloquently in the introduction: "...it is not entirely in a spirit of facetiousness that I have said to friends that I feel perhaps Schoenberg's work deserves a more superficial treatment than it has hitherto received." This theme runs throughout the book, and the reader actually has a chance to get to know Schoenberg's biography and how that biography potentially related to his music without being subjected to stifling theory.

The book as a whole is made up of short chapters some of which contain mostly biography and others of which contain mostly descriptions and reflections on some of Schoenberg's major works (there are chapters completely dedicated to the following works: Verklärte Nacht, Gurre-Lieder, Brettl-Lieder (from Schoenberg's suprising tenure with Berlin cabarets in 1901-1902), Five Pieces For Orchestra, Erwartung, Pierrot Lunaire, Die glückliche Hand, Moses Und Aron, and the String Trio). This book doesn't just cover his music, though. One chapter gets devoted to his very literary treatise on harmony, "Harmonielehre". Another chapter discusses Schoenberg's paintings (some of which Gustave Mahler purchased to help support his financially struggling colleague). Two interesting later chapters deal with his propensity to create games and practical inventions, and even a reflection on being short (a trait that the author confesses to share; Schoenberg himself was under 5'4" which ranks him heightwise beneath Napolean).

Some of the most fascinating biographical episodes involve the audience and critical reactions to Schoenberg's works (at a performance of Pierrot Lunaire an audience member supposedly pointed at Schoenberg and yelled "Shoot him! Shoot him!" other concerts prompted his friends to shield him from projectiles thrown by the audience, or to evacuate him from the theater, and many performances were literally shouted down - the vocalist at the premiere of his Second String Quartet apparently left the stage in tears). An entire chapter also gets dedicated to Schoenberg's twelve-tone technique (often derogatorily subsumed as "overly intellectualist"); a technique he followed in his later works (most notably in "Music for a Film Scene", Op. 34, and the famous Piano Concerto, Op. 42).

Schoenberg also lived through major world events: World War I (in which he took a part) and World War II (which forced him to flee Germany and Austria in the rising tide of 1930s Anti-Semitism; "Ode To Napolean Bonaparte", Op. 41, stands as Schoenberg's musical lashing out at Hitler's tyranny). He also tried to help Jews in europe during Hitler's rise; he took anti-semitism as a given (one could arguably make the depressingly bizarre claim that anti-semitism was almost "fashionable" in the early part of the twentieth-century) and advocated a Jewish homeland.

Schoenberg's skills as a teacher (his most reliable source of income throughout his life) receives notice here, too. His pedogogical style apparently didn't encourage devoteeism. Some of his most famous students included Alban Berg, Anton Webern, and John Cage. All followed their own distinct directions following Schoenberg's instruction.

This book brings Schoenberg to life for those who know little about him. Those who have not heard any of Schoenberg's music should seek it out before reading this book. After all, the message of this book relates to finding meaning through active listening to, not intellectualizing about, the music of Schoenberg. Some passages might get a little thick for those with no musical background. And some contain actual musical notation. Nonetheless, a music theory background is not required to read or even to enjoy this book (though admittedly it would be helpful). The book overall opens up the expressive possibilities of Schoenberg's music to those whose spines curl at the mere mention of his name.

Genres
Arranging Music for the Real World: Classical and Commercial Aspects (Book & CD set)
Published in Paperback by Alfred Publishing Company (2002-06)
Author: Vince Corozine
List price: $29.95
New price: $17.67
Used price: $16.27

Average review score:

Opens the door to a universe of sound
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-23
As a rock guitarist who reads and writes music, I bought Arranging Music for the Real World hoping to expand my knowledge and discover new techniques for using brass, woodwinds, and strings to enrich recorded songs. Packed with practical and timeless information, Corozine's book-and-CD package exceeds my expectations. The audio examples are beautifully recorded and performed, and make the book's notation come alive. If you've wondered how to get those lush sounds from the golden era of big bands, swing ensembles, and classic movie scores, this book provides the answers. Most importantly, it will give you the confidence to work with trained musicians and express your ideas using their vocabulary.

It isn't an introduction to music theory. To benefit from this material, you need to read music notation and understand keys, scales, intervals, and harmony. But if you're looking to unlock the secrets of arranging for acoustic instruments, this book offers a lifetime of study and inspiration. Just be sure you have a piano or keyboard handy to explore the hundreds of examples Corozine uses to illustrate essential concepts and techniques.

Great Book
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-27
Corozine's text has been sorely needed by studying arrangers for quite some time; classical focused books have addressed instrument ranges and effects applicable to those specific instruments through orchestral literature, and commercial ones give little information on practical uses of specific techniques. Corozine's text not only covers these two areas, but also is careful to contrast different treatments of arranging the same music. The accompanying compact disc is very helpful in illustrating Corozine's points. In all, a book I wish I had while studying for my own master's degree in arranging in the mid 1990s. Well done!

New Vince Corozine Book
Helpful Votes: 20 out of 22 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-22
I have to admit to some personal bias in posting this review. A few years ago, I commuted from my home in Hampton, Virginia, down to North Carolina to take some composition lessons with Vince Corozine. Vince showed me some preliminary chapters from a book he was working on and asked me to read and make some comments on what he had done. His goal was to discuss contemporary arranging techniques and compare those techniques with the compositional style of the great composers of the western European tradition. I have just finished reading the complete book for the first time and I think that Vince fulfilled his goal admirably. In addition to being a master composer/arranger and an inspiring teacher, Vince is also a warm and generous person. These traits are in full bloom in this book. Along with providing a wealth of information about arranging and composition, the tone of the book reflects Vince's joy of music making and his willingness to share his encyclopedic knowledge of the subject. I especially liked Chapter 6, A Brief Historical Survey of Orchestration, where Vince compares orchestration styles from the Baroque to the Impressionistic periods. Vince has included numerous examples from his own arrangements and original compositions, which reinforces the fact that this is no mere academic exercise. There are abundant musical examples in the text and an accompanying CD, which includes selections, most or all, arranged or composed by Vince. This book is sure to be a welcome addition to the literature , as both a manual of instruction and as a reference work in itself- a great contribution from one of America's outstanding composer/arrangers.

A MUST FOR AN ARRANGER'S LIBRARY
Helpful Votes: 22 out of 23 total.
Review Date: 2002-09-17
Where was this masterful book "Arranging Music For the Real World" when I needed it" As a young "road" musician, early in the stages of arranging, I used to ask reputable arrangers how they had become so knowledgeable and learned to write so well. Unequivocally they all gave the same answer, "I studied and analyzed scores of the 'Masters.'" The author of this excellent book, Vince Corozine, uses this unique concept (the basic principles of arranging and orchestration), as the basis of his book, showing how composers of the past used them and how they effectively may be used today to achieve a fresh contemporary sound. Mr. Corozine has fulfilled his goal admirably, with the inclusion of music of all genres: jazz, symphonic, pop, choral, Broadway, film, and television scores. Not only does he display samples of his own compositions and the "Masters," he demonstrates his works beautifully on a CD which comes with the book. If you feel your arrangements and compositions lack the excitement, tonal color and sophistication that you so desire, then this book is your answer. As a professional musician and music educator, I highly recommend "Arranging Music for the Real World."

Excellent buy!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-20
Excellent book, lots of examples in the CD. The book gives you tons of useful tips for the working or weekend musician. I gave it 4 stars because it already starts with concepts like open or closed position, and doesn't explain them, making this book a bit advanced for a beginner. If you're not a beginner, this book is for you!

Genres
The Art of Jazz Trumpet
Published in Paperback by Gerard & Sarzin Publishing Company (1993-05)
Author: John McNeil
List price: $11.95
Used price: $26.78

Average review score:

The most important book for any jazz trumpet player.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-24
Without a doubt, John McNeil has done something with this book that has long been overdue. With the advent of jazz education, so much focus has been put on what to play, rather than on how to play it. McNeil presents exercises that go beyond the simple articulation of scales and puts them in real world situations. Furthermore, the author addresses technique issues that most other jazz trumpet books fail to even acknowledge exist. The section on alternate fingerings and different ways of tonging, that are so important to today's jazz improviser, are throughly covered through simple explanation and execution. Not to mention, the accompanying CD has several examples being performed by astute trumpet players who play through them with the ease of a basic stamp warm-up routine.

Quite possibly, the most important part of the book is the section on finger technique. With three pages full of finger twisters for the jazz trumpet player to navigate, the trumpet player will find more fluidity in their performance, resulting in better solos and overall better trumpet facility. This book should be required to be used by every trumpet player, commercial or not. The result will be a much more technically proficient musician, no longer hindered by a lack of technique, but rather, aided by a plethora of it.

The Jazz Trumpet Bible
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-13
I fell in love with it since I bought it on Amazon.com. It quite amaze me since I wanna learn more about jazz. This book would definitely take u far as being the best trumpet player u'll be. I'm also a trumpet player, and 'specially play other instruments I self-taught like the piano, keyboard, organ, harmonica, recorder, trombone, mellophone, French horn, euphonium, percussion, drums, flugelhorn, guitar, etc.

I'm not gonna say "I don't like this or whatever". I think it's a great introduction showing some basics and material work on how you 'gon be good at it. I know a lot of people don't agree what I'm saying. I believe that every trumpet player or music learner perhaps should have this along with Jazz & Blues, Arban's Conservatory Method for Trumpet, 1001 Blues Licks, 1001 Jazz Licks, Building a Jazz Vocabulary, The Jazz Fakebook, 28 Modern Jazz Trumpet Solos, Bks. 1 & 2, 14 Blues and Funk Etudes, and 14 Jazz and Funk Etudes all by Bob Mintzer.

Like this is definitely a book I should keep even tho I wanted practice some more I believe.

Worthy Investment, Interesting Trip
Helpful Votes: 20 out of 22 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-02
Fellow Travelers -

I have found John McNeil's "The Art of Jazz Trumpet" to be truly helpful and inspiring. The exercises presented are tough, though-provoking, and very cleverly focused on amplifying skills that appear - to me at least - to be genuinely useful in a jazz setting. Personally, I see the value of this book less in the applicability of specific lines ("licks") to tunes, and more in improving the improviser's ability to present his/her own ideas with more propulsive articulation, fluidity, and melodic confidence.

There is, of course, a significant (in terms of wood shed frustration) cost factor here - but most players, I suspect, will feel that the improvements are deep and fast enough to fall well within our pain and patience thresholds.

Thanks John for a terrific contribution to the field, and for my (small but enjoyable) personal mini-breakthrough - it has been a long time, and I'm really enjoying the experience.

Bravo.

Jim Stagnitto
www.stagnitto.newhopecollective.com

THE Jazz Trumpet Book
Helpful Votes: 23 out of 24 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-18
The Art of Jazz Trumpet is by far the best book on the subject I have seen to date. The exercises sound incredibly hip and were challenging to play. The ideas for playing over chord changes have totally changed my conception of the horn. The history of trumpet is also fascinating, and McNeil's take on influences is truly unique. I highly recommend this book.

Excellent Resource
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-09
The discography alone makes the price of the book worth it to me. The history and pix of trumpet players is also a nice addition to what is an excellent method for jazz trumpet. Its exercises are tough but sound very cool and all would be great arrows in your improvisation quiver. I've already started practicing and am enjoying myself more than I have in a long time. Thanks, John.

Genres
Autocrat Of The Breakfast Table (Volume 1) (The Works of Oliver Wendell Holmes)
Published in Paperback by Reprint Services Corp (2007-10-30)
Author: Oliver Wendell Holmes
List price: $75.00
New price: $75.00

Average review score:

Glad to see this back in print ...
Helpful Votes: 18 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-28
The Autocrat of the Breakfast-Table is a demonstration of New England civility in the 1850s. I believe it went through more than 50 editions by the end of the nineteenth century, so it must have been very widely read at one time. The book is packed with amazing observations. Holmes takes the time to wonder why the sense of smell is the quickest path to memory. He rails against puns in a way that is better than punning. He points out human flaws and praises examples of good living. Trees come alive, through prosaic description and poetic flights. Would you like to go back to the 1850s and have a conversation with a Boston intellectual? Here's your chance. There are many old copies of this book sitting around, but it's nice that it's come back into print (again).... (it's also a quiet love story, by the way)

A delightful essay on life, love, assorted topics
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-23
The imaginary scene is a boarding house breakfast. Conversation is dominated by a lively gent who's seen it all. He holds forth on women, school, philosophy, rowing, interrupted from time to time with verses such as the Deacon's Masterpiece. It's witty, poignant, and rightfully a classic.

Delightful
Helpful Votes: 25 out of 29 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-19
Two oral practices flourished in antebellum America: the lecture (or sermon) and the conversation. Lectures, such as Emerson's "The American Scholar" and sermons, such as the abolitionist sermons of Henry Ward Beecher, are well-known examples of this era. But it was also known as the Golden Age of Conversation, and its greatest practitioner was generally agreed to be Oliver Wendell Holmes, Senior.

Holmes was considered an important American writer until the 1920s when he was excised from the American canon by the modernists. They depicted him as willfully provincial, and elitist. What those critics failed to understand was that the Autocrat is also a comic pose, and that Holmes is making sport of everyone, including elitists. Holmes' democratic view of conversation as an open, free-wheeling discourse where anyone could join the Autocrat at his table, as long as they enlivened the conversation, ran counter to the views of his more elitist friends in Boston's Saturday Club in Boston. Holmes loved to talk, and his love for talk made him a democrat, or perhaps a true republican.

His Autocrat is a many sided character: stern and foolish, admonitory and celebratory, a polymorph who will don any temporaty mask necessary to keep the conversation alive. Holmes' playful metaphorical imagination is also a revelation. His gift for translating complex ideas into homey metaphors, aphorisms, and similes is nothing short of miraculous. In the words of another seriously comic American whom I'm sure Holmes would have delighted in, the Autocrat "floats like a butterfly, stings like a bee."

The Autocrat of the Breakfast table begins "in media res," in the middle of a conversation, with the Autocrat attempting to set the rules for conversation at his table. They are generous rules, but even they are open to sabotage by his tablemates at the boarding house. He begins by banning "facts" from his table as impediments to conversation, (a condition that should prevail on today's too numerous current event talking head shows. But I, like the Autocrat, digress).

Here's how the Autocrat starts: "I was just going to say, when I was interrupted, that one of the many ways of classifying minds is under the head of arithmetical and algebraical intellects. All economical and practical wisdom is an extension of the following arithmetical formula: 2 + 2 = 4. Every philosophical proposition has the more general character of the expression a + b = c. We are mere operatives, empirics, and egoists, until we learn to think in letters instead of figures." "They all stared. There is a divinity student lately come among us to whom I commonly address remarks like this. "

In other words, as Gibian says in his marvelous OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES AND THE CULTURE OF CONVERSATION: [The Autocrat] only asks us to study his beliefs the way a pragmatist would study the doctrines of any religion: "I don't want you to believe anything I say; I only want you to to try to see what makes me believe it." How refreshing in this age of factoids and statisticoids recited with rancor and ideological certitude, to hear the Autocrat and his tablemates at the boarding house attempting to fashion a democracy through and by their conversation. Nowadays all we have are the unironic Autocrats, control freaks like John McLaughlin, Ted Koppel, Rush Limbaugh, and that guy on FOX whose name I have, pleasantly, forgotten.

Listening to the Autocrat you can almost hear American singing. It's not exactly Walt Whitman's America, but it's still America in the hopeful, experimental antebellum era, and thus a good antidote to the cold technocratic chatter and lukewarm public relations cant we are showered with in this hypermediated century.

Thoughts and the Times From 1850
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-16
An interesting range of thoughtful opinions, imbedded in a look at American life in the 1850s, by the father of a future Supreme Court Associate Justice. Part of the charm of this book is in the fact that at that time horses had been the only means of human-assisted transportation for the last few thousand years (with the exception of the new-fangled railroad which was changing the world). Electronics were not even imagined. Automobiles were 50 years into the future.

Astounding that this book is out of print....
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-11
The Autocrat of the Breakfast-Table is a demonstration of New England civility in the 1850s. I believe it went through more than 50 editions by the end of the nineteenth century, so it must have been very widely read at one time. The book is packed with amazing observations. Holmes takes the time to wonder why the sense of smell is the quickest path to memory. He rails against puns in a way that is better than punning. He points out human flaws and praises examples of good living. Trees come alive, through prosaic description and poetic flights. Would you like to go back to the 1850s and have a conversation with a Boston intellectual? Here's your chance. There are many old copies of this book sitting around, but it would be nice if it came back into print.... (it's also a quiet love story, by the way)


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