Abott, Reverend Jacob
Year: 1834-1858
Complete Citation:
Reverend Abbott, Jacob. Rollo at Play, Rollo at School; Rollo at Work', Rollo Learning to Read; Rollo Learning to Talk; Rollo's Correspondence; Rollo's Experiments', Rollo's Museums', Rollo's Philosophy, Rollo's Vacations', and Rollo's Travels. Another group was devoted to Rollo's tours of Europe: Rollo on the Atlantic, Rollo in Holland', Rollo in London', Rollo in Naples; Rollo in Paris', Rollo in Scot-land', Rollo in Switzerland', Rollo on the Rhine', and Rollo in Genoa.Source: Literary References
Reprints: "Rollo," the name Ives called musicians unwilling to listen to advanced dissonances and other techniques found in modern music, was derived from a character in books (1834--1858) by Reverend Jacob Abbott. Rollo could understand only the simplest of situations that had been taught or had been explained to him in great detail. Original publishers include Boston, MA: Weeks, Jordan, and Company; Philadelphia, PA: Hogan & Thompson; Boston, MA: Gould, Kendall & Lincoln.
XIII. Ives in Literature
B. Fiction
Baldwin, Linda, producer-director
Year: 1979
Complete Citation:
Baldwin, Linda, producer--director. “12th Street Rag.” Nebraska Educational Television Network for the Mid--America Arts Alliance. November 22, 23, 24, 1979.Source: Telecast
Reprints: Telecast on stations in Missouri, Oklahoma, Kansas, and Nebraska.
XV. Television Broadcasts, Films, and Videocassettes
A. Television Broadcasts
Bernstein, Leonard; New York Philharmonic
Complete Citation:
“Charles Ives: American Pioneer.” New York Philharmonic Young Peo-ple’s Concerts with Leonard Bernstein. New York, NY: CBS-TV, 60 minutes. February 23, 1967.Source: Telecast
XV. Television Broadcasts, Films, and Videocassettes
A. Television Broadcasts
Brockway, Merrill, producer
Year: 1970
Complete Citation:
Brockway, Merrill, producer. “La Belle Epoque.” Camera Three. Virgil Fox, organ. WCBS-TV, 30 minutes. Fall 1970.Source: Telecast/Videocassette
Reprints: Includes Variations on “America.” Available on videocassette.
XV. Television Broadcasts, Films, and Videocassettes
A. Television Broadcasts
Budiansky, Stephen
Year: 2013
Complete Citation:
Budiansky, Stephen. “Ives, Diabetes, and His ‘Exhausted Vein’ of Composition.” American Music 31.1 (Spring 2013): 1-25.Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
I. Compositional Process
Carlson, Michael
Year: 1996
Complete Citation:
Carlson, Michael. “The Discomposing Composer.” Specta-tor 277/8781 (November 2, 1996): 44.Notes: “[H]is marvelous 'From Hanover Square North' ranks with Nielsen's Fifth as the most moving reactions to the Great War.”
Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
I. Compositional Process
Cave II, Lawrence Harold
Year: 1984
Complete Citation:
Cave II, Lawrence Harold. “Abstract: The Role of the Organ in Ives’ Develop-ment as Composer.” Sonneck Society for American Music Bulletin 10 (Fall 1984): 62.Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
I. Compositional Process
Davis, David M., producer/director; Aaron Copland, host/writer
Year: 1965
Complete Citation:
Davis, David M., producer/director; Copland, Aaron host/writer. “Experi-mental Attitudes (I).” Music of the Twenties series, Program 11. National Educational Television, 30 minutes. June 6, 1965.Notes: Originally telecast on over Performances of The Unanswered Question (Roger Voisin, trumpet, four flutes, Cambridge Festival Orchestra; Aaron Copland, conductor; Kalman Novak, associate conductor), and Two Little Flowers', Serenity, and Charlie Rutlage (Donald Gramm, baritone; Richard Cumming, piano). Viewing copy in Library of Congress.
Source: Telecast
Reprints: Rebroadcast on Boston, MA: WGBH-TV, 30 minutes.
XV. Television Broadcasts, Films, and Videocassettes
A. Television Broadcasts
Denahan, Donal
Year: 1982
Complete Citation:
Henahan, Donal. “When the Music Ceases to Sound: Ego, Morale or Changing Times Can Cause Composers to Quit at Their Peak.” Kansas City Star. April 25, sec. K, 10.Notes: “In 1916 he finished Symphony No. 4, and that was it: for the next 40 years, until his death in 1954 at the age of 79, Ives sat silent in Con-necticut.”
Source: Newspaper
VI. Topical Studies
I. Compositional Process
Discussion by Morton Gould (nar-rator), Henry Cowell, Corinne Curry, and Harold Farberman.
Complete Citation:
“Charles Ives: American Original.” The World Of Music Series. Program No. 17. Newark, NJ: WNDT, 30 minutes. 1965.Source: Telecast
Reprints: Rebroadcast on National Educational Television.
XV. Television Broadcasts, Films, and Videocassettes
A. Television Broadcasts
Englander, Roger, producer/director - Leonard Bernstein, narrator/conductor.
Year: 1961
Complete Citation:
Englander, Roger, producer/director; Bernstein, Leonard, narrator/conductor. “Folk Music in the Concert Hall.” New York, NY: CBS-TV Telecast, April 9, 1961.Notes: Includes 5th movement from Ives Symphony No. 2.
Source: Telecast
XV. Television Broadcasts, Films, and Videocassettes
A. Television Broadcasts
Glöckler, Ralph Roger
Year: 2012
Complete Citation:
Glöckler, Ralph Roger. Mr. Ives und die Vettern vierten Grades: Roman. Berlin, Germany: Elfenbein, 2012.Source: Book
XIII. Ives in Literature
B. Fiction
Heister, Hanns-Werner
Year: 2004
Complete Citation:
Heister, Hanns-Werner. “Mimesis, Memoria, Montage: Uber einige Prinzipien des Komponisten Ives.” In Charles Ives 1874-1954: Amerikanischer Pionier der Neuen Musik, edited by Hanns-Werner Heister and Werner Kremp, 163-178. Atlantische Texte, Vol. 23. Trier, Germany: Wissenschaftlicher Verlag Trier, 2004.Source: Chapter in Book
VI. Topical Studies
I. Compositional Process
Isham, Howard
Year: 1973
Complete Citation:
Isham, Howard. “The Musical Thinking of Charles Ives.” Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 31 (1973): 395-404.Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
I. Compositional Process
James Drew
Year: 1970
Complete Citation:
“Modern Music and the Debt to Charles Ives.” Yale Reports Series. Hartford, CT: WTIC, 2 parts: 30 minutes each. Part 1 on December 27, 1970; Part 2 on January 3, 1971.Source: Telecast
Reprints: Discussion of Ives as a composer, of his father, of his musical background, of the traditions that influenced him, of the structure of his compositions, and of his influence on other composers by James Drew, Assistant Professor of Music Theory at Yale University. Recorded musical examples for illustration chosen from works by Ives, George Rochberg, Luciano Berio, and James Drew.
XV. Television Broadcasts, Films, and Videocassettes
A. Television Broadcasts
Johnson, Owen
Year: 1912
Complete Citation:
Johnson, Owen. Stover at Yale. Boston, MA: Little, Brown, 1912.Source: Book
XIII. Ives in Literature
B. Fiction
Kolter, Horst
Year: 1972
Complete Citation:
Koller, Horst. “Zur Kompositionstechnik von Charles Edward Ives.” Neue Zeitschrift für Musik 133 (1972): 559-567.Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
I. Compositional Process
Lowens, Irving
Complete Citation:
Lowens, Irving. “Ives as a Versatile Man.” Sunday Star [Washington], April 17, 1966, sec. E, 4.Source: Telecast
Reprints: Background for WETA- TV telecast.
XV. Television Broadcasts, Films, and Videocassettes
A. Television Broadcasts
Lynds, D.
Year: 1989
Complete Citation:
Lynds, D. “Charles Ives and the President of the United States.” South Dakota Review 211A (Winter 1989): 156-161.Source: Journal
XIII. Ives in Literature
B. Fiction
Mellers, Wilfrid H.
Year: 1964
Complete Citation:
Mellers, Wilfrid H. “Jottings of Charles Ives” [Appendix I]. In Music in a New Found Land: Themes and Developments in the History of American Music, 441-443. London, United Kingdom: Barrie and Rockliff, 1964.Source: Chapter in Book
VI. Topical Studies
I. Compositional Process