Pendragon Press  

BOOKS
 By Series
 By Subject
 Browse
 Textbooks
 New Titles
 In Press

ORDERING
 Security
 Order offline
  


INFO
 
 Notification
 Submissions
 Book trade
 Contact Us

Copyright © 2008
Pendragon Press
P.O. Box 190
Hillsdale, NY 12529 USA
tel (518) 325-6100
fax (518) 325-6102
US/Canada orders:
toll-free (877) 656-6381

 
PPNo 611 New

Messiaen’s Contemplations of Covenant and Incarnation

Musical Symbols of Faith in the Two Great Piano Cycles of the 1940s

Author/Editor Siglind Bruhn
ISBN 9781576471296 1576471292
Price/Pub. Date $36.00 2007.11
Spec/Pages/Illustrations Printed case cover 296
Series Dimension and Diversity: Studies in 20th-Century Music 07
 

The celebrated composer Olivier Messiaen (1908-1992) characterized himself as a “rhythmician, ornithologist, and theologian.” All interpreters concur that his life and work are grounded in a profound faith. This book examines the translation of his faith into his musical language. It centers on a hermeutic analysis of two spiritually motiviated instrumental compositions, Visions de l’amen for two pianos (1943) and Vingt Regards sur l’enfant-Jésus for piano solo (1944). Part I introduces the main aspects of the composer’s religious environment (the catholic literary revival, his father Pierre and his mentor Charles Tournemire) as well as the components of his idiosyncratic musico-symbolic vocabulary. Parts II and III examine the twenty-seven movements comprised in the Visions and the Regards, whose thematic material, structure, and musical as well as spiritual function within the whole cycle are interpreted in light of the literary source and imagery that inspired Messiaen.

This book is part of Siglind Bruhn's Messiaen Trilogy:

Click here for a full listing of Siglind Bruhn's Pendragon Press titles.

Subjects MUSIC / Musical Instruments / Piano & Keyboard
MUSIC / Religious / General
 

Call our toll-free order line at (877) 656-6381 or

Shopping CartOrder this book at Amazon.com (USA) or at Amazon.ca (Canada) or at the Eurospan bookstore (overseas).