Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/94752
Title: An apprenticeship and its stocktakings : Leibowitz, Boulez, Messiaen, and the discourse and practice of new music
Authors: Erwin, Max
Keywords: Boulez, Pierre, 1925-2016 -- Criticism and interpretation
Messiaen, Olivier, 1908-1992 -- Criticism and interpretation
Leibowitz, René, 1913-1972 -- Criticism and interpretation
Second Viennese school (Group of composers) -- Influence
Music -- Europe -- 20th century -- History and criticism
Performance practice (Music) -- History -- 20th century
Issue Date: 2021
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Citation: Erwin, M. (2021). An apprenticeship and its stocktakings: Leibowitz, Boulez, Messiaen, and the discourse and practice of new music. Twentieth-Century Music, 18(1), 71-93.
Abstract: The textbook historical account of post-war New Music describes a logical and radical succession from Schoenberg to Webern to the Darmstadt School. Against this narrative of inevitability, I provide a more contingent account of the institutionalization of a particular discourse of New Music in the aftermath of the Second World War in Europe. What is contingent here is not so much why or how certain figures – chiefly Pierre Boulez and René Leibowitz – were important, but the shape and the logic by which this importance was established and maintained. Accordingly, this article first of all provides a summary of just what it meant for Leibowitz’s understanding of New Music to be reproduced in an institutional capacity. From here, I undertake close critical reading of Boulez’s break with Leibowitz in order to discover what, exactly, Boulez began to do differently to establish a new practice.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/94752
Appears in Collections:Scholarly Works - SchPAMS



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