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Bibliography

Noroa, Daniel Quiroga

Year: 1996
Complete Citation:
Noroa, Daniel Quiroga. “Creadon Musical Chilena: Encargo ‘Charles Ives’ para Compositores.” Revista musical chilena 50 (July-December 1996): 85-85.
Source: Magazine
VI. Topical Studies
U. Institutions and Ives’ Legacy

Ogden, Gail

Year: 1998
Complete Citation:
Ogden, Gail. “Dansers Studio Offers all Ives’ Colors: City Edition.” Lincoln Journal Star, April 11, 1998.
Source: Newspaper
XII. Interdisciplinary Performances with Ives’s Music
D. Reviews

Phillips, A.

Year: 1993
Complete Citation:
Phillips, A. “Blankert: ‘Charles Ives.’” Dance Theatre Journal 11/1 (Winter 1993): 37.
Source: Journal
XII. Interdisciplinary Performances with Ives’s Music
B. Dance

Regner, Otto Friedrich

Year: 1972
Complete Citation:
Hartmut Regitz, Otto Friedrich Regner, and Heinz-Ludwig Schneiders. Reclams Ballet- führer. Stuttgart, Germany: Stuttgart Reclams, 1972.
Source: Book
XII. Interdisciplinary Performances with Ives’s Music
D. Reviews

Reny, Bob

Year: 2015
Complete Citation:
Reny, Bob. “Between the Ears: DoAM Ensemble - “Mists: Charles Ives For Jazz Orchestra.”” IAJRC Journal, Vol. 48, No. 2 (2015): 70-71.
Source: Journal
XII. Interdisciplinary Performances with Ives’s Music
C. Other

Richard Dufallo and Brenden Gill, developers.

Year: 1975
Complete Citation:
Richard Dufallo and Brenden Gill, developers. Meeting Mr. Ives (1975); theater piece.
Notes:

Music: The Unanswered Question’, General William Booth Enters into Heaven', Like a Sick Eagle', and The Children's Hour. <br><br>Prf: 1975 August 20--24: Lenox, MA; Lenox Art Center; Dennis Nahat, choreographer and stage director; Wayne Turnage, bari-tone; Catherine Rowe, soprano; Donald Symington (George Ives); David Westfass (Charles Ives).

Source: Theater Piece
XII. Interdisciplinary Performances with Ives’s Music
A. Theatre

Riedel, Johannes

Year: 1975
Complete Citation:
Riedel, Johannes. “The Ives Liturgy: A Mass of the Com-mon Man.” Student Musicologists at Minnesota 6 (1975): 225--236.
Source: Journal
XII. Interdisciplinary Performances with Ives’s Music
D. Reviews
Year: 1975-76
Complete Citation:
Riedel, Johannes. “The Ives Liturgy: A Mass of the Common Man.” Student Musicologists at Minnesota 6 (1975-76): 225-236.
Source: Journal
XII. Interdisciplinary Performances with Ives’s Music
C. Other

Riedel, Johannes, complier

Year: 1970
Complete Citation:
Johannes Riedel, compiler. The Ives Liturgy: A Mass of the Common Man (1970); service for reader, flute, brass group, instrumental group, and recordings. Compiled, and/or "created," from the writings and com-positions of Ives and American hymns.
Notes:

Included (in order, an asterisk signifies recorded example) excerpts from: *Variations on "America"; *Sonata No. 2, Concord, Mass., 1840--1860, for piano; “Watchman,TellUs of the Night;"*Hymn Variation—Symphony No. 4: 1; Immortality (as an introit); *The Unanswered Question; *Robert Browning Overture; *Symphony No. 4, 1; "Watch- man, Tell Us of the Night;" At the River, "Shall We Gather At the River"; *Central Park in the Dart, "From Greenland's Icy Mountains;" *Quartet No. 1: I; Musical Creed (a memo by Ives); "O, For a Thousand Tongues to Sing"; "What a Friend We Have in Jesus"; *Symphony No. 3: 1; *From the Steeples and the Mountains', Adeste Fidelis in an Organ Prelude. <br><br>Prf: 1970 May 17: Minneapolis; Episcopal Center, University of Minnesota; Sheila Wolk, soprano; Phillip Sandahl, guitar; Lyle Hagert, organ.

Source: Performance
XII. Interdisciplinary Performances with Ives’s Music
C. Other

Robbins, Jerome, choreographer

Year: 1988
Complete Citation:
Jerome Robbins, choreographer. Ives, Songs (1988); New York City Ballet. Arranged in a manner evoking Thornton Wilder's Our Town with a "narrator" dressed as Ives. 1989 February 12: New York; New York State Theater; David Evitts, singer; Gordon Boelmer, piano.
Notes:

Music: The Children's Hour, Memories: Part A: "Very Pleasant"; Waltz', The Cage; The Se'er, Two Little Flowers', At the River, Serenity, He Is There!', Tom Sails Away, White Gulls; Songs My Mother Taught Me; There Is a Lane; In Summer Fields; from The Incantation; Autumn; Like a Sick Eagle; Elegie. <br><br>Prf: 1988 February 4: New York.

Source: Performance (ballet)
XII. Interdisciplinary Performances with Ives’s Music
B. Dance

Rodgers, Harold A.

Year: 1975
Complete Citation:
Rodgers, Harold A. “Lenox Art Center. ‘Ives’ Meeting Mr. Ives.” High Fidelity/Musical America 25/12 (December 1975): 26--27.
Source: Magazine
XII. Interdisciplinary Performances with Ives’s Music
D. Reviews

Rothstein, Edward

Year: 1980
Complete Citation:
Rothstein, Edward. “Ives Country.” The New York Times, August 22, 1980, sec. C, 8.
Source: Newspaper
VI. Topical Studies
U. Institutions and Ives’ Legacy

Rudhyar, Dane

Year: 1938
Complete Citation:
Rudhyar, Dane. “The Birth of the Transcendental Movement and Its Manifestations in Music and the Modern Dance.” New Mexico Daily Examiner, August 21, 1938, 195-196.
Source: Newspaper
XII. Interdisciplinary Performances with Ives’s Music
B. Dance

Sanders, Donald

Year: 1976
Complete Citation:
Sanders, Donald. “Plaques Mark Homes of Ives, Ellington.” Boston Globe, August 17, 1976, 20.
Source: Newspaper
VI. Topical Studies
U. Institutions and Ives’ Legacy

Schulman, Jennie

Year: 2000
Complete Citation:
Schulman, Jennie. “Eliot Feld Brings Provocation to NYC Ballet.” Back Stage 41, no.7 (February 2000).
Source: Magazine
XII. Interdisciplinary Performances with Ives’s Music
D. Reviews
Year: 2000
Complete Citation:
Schulman, Jennie. “Eliot Feld brings provocation to NYC ballet.” Back Stage 41, no. 7 (February 2000).
Source: Magazine
XII. Interdisciplinary Performances with Ives’s Music
D. Reviews
Year: 2004
Complete Citation:
Schulman, Jennie. “NYC ballet in Balanchine American Fest.” Back Stage 45, no. 25 (June 2004).
Source: Magazine
XII. Interdisciplinary Performances with Ives’s Music
D. Reviews

Schuman, William

Year: 1940-1941
Complete Citation:
Schuman, William. “A Brief Study of Music Organizations Founded in the Interest of the Living Composer.” Twice a Year (Fall-Winter 1940 and Spring-Summer 1941) 5-6: 361--367.
Notes:

A brief but worthwhile sur-vey, especially of “The League of Composers” (365): “The Arrow Music Press is a cooperative venture. The composer pays all, or a portion of, the expense of publishing his compositions and in return receives all but a small fraction of the return. A very interesting catalogue has al-ready been issued by the press, which appears to be increasing its acti-vities.” With the Arrow Press imprint and its subsidiary Cos Cob Press, the following works of Ives were published: Sonata [No. 4] for violin and piano; Serenity; Sixty--Seventh Psalm; Charlie Rutlage; Evening; The Greatest Man', Walking; Seven Songs’, Third Symphony (“The Camp Meeting”) [CI 87); Sonata No. 2, “Concord, Mass., 1840--1860,” for piano; and Where the Eagle (in the Cos Cob Song Volume). The Cos Cob Press was later absorbed by the Arrow Music Press that in turn was merged into Associated Music Publishers. Ives and Walter Piston had the most titles in this catalogue. The article re-prints “Prologue” from Essays Before a Sonata.

Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
U. Institutions and Ives’ Legacy

Schwarz, K.R.

Year: 1988
Complete Citation:
Schwarz, K.R. “Dance; As American as Robbins & Ives.(Arts and Leisure Desk).” The New York Times, January 31, 1988.
Source: Newspaper
XII. Interdisciplinary Performances with Ives’s Music
D. Reviews

Schwarz, K. Robert

Year: 1988
Complete Citation:
Schwarz, K. Robert. “As American as Robbins & Ives: The New Ballet Choreographed by Jerome Robbins to Songs by Charles Ives Reflects the Composer's Life.” The New York Times, January 31, 1988, H10.
Source: Newspaper
XII. Interdisciplinary Performances with Ives’s Music
B. Dance