Is there such a thing as women's music? Do women write and listen to music differently than men do? While recognizing that the differences among women are as distinct as the differences between genders, this bold new study examines gender's influence on music. The author's unique analytical strategy shows, in its application to actual musical compositions, that there is a fluid relationship between the music and the analyst, between the text and the context, and that 20th-century music is inextricably bound to notions of gender that transcend aesthetics.Much of the work on women's music to date has failed to deal critically with the actual compositions, settling instead for more biographical or sociological approaches. In this respect, this work fills an important void. Using many concrete examples and careful analyses of the work of such undervalued composers as Alma Mahler-Werfel, Anne Boyd, and Moya Henderson, it grounds the abstract firmly, and fascinatingly, in the practical.
Author(s): Sally Macarthur
Year: 2001
Language: English
Pages: 225
Contents......Page 10
Illustrations......Page 12
Acknowledgments......Page 14
Introduction: For Women's Eyes Only?......Page 18
1 Feminist Aesthetics in Music......Page 28
2 Music in Context and Practice......Page 48
3 The Power of Sound, the Power of Sex: Alma Schindler-Mahler's Ansturm......Page 80
4 Sexing the Subject of Musical Analysis: Rebecca Clarke and Elisabeth Lutyens......Page 98
5 Meditations on Feminist Aesthetics: Anne Boyd's Cycle of Love......Page 124
6 Framing the Case for a Feminist Reading of Elena Kats-Chernin's Postmodern Tast-en......Page 146
7 Sexual Signatures: Feminist Aesthetics in the Music of Moya Henderson after the Death of the Author......Page 166
8 This Music Which Is Between Two......Page 190
Bibliography......Page 202
Discography......Page 214
A......Page 216
C......Page 217
F......Page 218
H......Page 219
L......Page 220
P......Page 221
S......Page 222
V......Page 223
Z......Page 224