Product Details
New Directions in Music

New Directions in Music
By David Cope

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Product Description

Directions in the musical avant-garde in the past fifty years seem as numerous and diverse as the com-posers and their works. Yet these directions have historical motives and aesthetic values, traceable and uniquely observable due to their singularly radical nature. Building on the success of previous editions, the Seventh Edition of New Direc-tions in Music explores the history, philosophy, composers, and works of the avant-garde since the late 1940s, emphasizing works depart-ing radically from tradition. Outstanding features include extensive bibliographies of written works and recordings; interviews with important avant-garde composers, showing readers firsthand the thought behind their works; in-depth analyses of specific works relevant to each chapter; and addresses, with websites, of publishers of avant-garde music.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #452118 in Books
  • Published on: 2000-09-19
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 259 pages

Customer Reviews

Still the most complete and even-handed survey5
Before Alex Ross' "The Rest is Noise" takes over the discussion, it seems only fair to put in a good word about the one and original book on twentieth century music, the one that's the most even-handed and is aware of all the trends--David Cope's "New Directions in Music."

I first read this book in its first edition back in 1974. It was a most valuable guide through a world I'd only become aware of in 1972, a world infinitely fascinating, but bewilderingly immense. A fair and detailed guide like this was exactly what I needed. This is as unapologetic a book as one could wish, too. The emphasis for everything covered, from Cowell to antimusic, is descriptive rather than judgmental. So you always feel like you're getting the straight story.

The most recent edition, the seventh, is from 2001, so covers three more decades worth of music making than the rather slender volume I started on. Despite a fine book by Michael Nyman (Experimental music: Cage and beyond), David Cope's book remains the single most comprehensive and most valuable survey of twentieth century music I know. Emphasis on the word "music." Other books on new music, including the most recent one alluded to above, spend a lot of time on history and biography and psychology and physiology. Those are all interesting things, to be sure, but music often seems in the other books a mere by-product of social and emotional forces.

Not so in "New Directions in Music." This is simply and consistently a book about music.

The price is good but delibery was late4
It was good to buy a new book with a low price but the delibery was very late than I expected.