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Bibliography

Gaudibert, Eric

Year: 1991
Complete Citation:
Gaudibert, Eric. “A propos de From the steeples and the mountains d’lves.” Dissonanz/Dissonance 29 (August 1991): 14-15.
Source: Journal
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
A. Orchestral and Band Works

Ghandar, Ann

Year: 1980
Complete Citation:
Ghandar, Ann. “Charles Ives: Organisation in emerson.” Musicology Australia, Vol. 6, Issue 1 (1980): 111-127.
Source: Journal
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
A. Orchestral and Band Works

Gibbons, William

Year: 2008
Complete Citation:
Gibbons, William. “‘Yankee Doodle’ and Nationalism, 1780-1920.” American Music 26/2 (2008): 246-274.
Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
B. Musical Quotation or Borrowing

Gilman, Lawrence

Year: 1927
Complete Citation:
Gilman, Lawrence. “Music: A New Opera (Milhaud), a New Sym-phony (Ives) and a Debussy Fragment.” The New York Herald Tribune. January 31, 1927.
Source: Newspaper
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
A. Orchestral and Band Works
Year: 1927
Complete Citation:
Gilman, Lawrence, “Music: A New Opera (Milhaud), a New Sym-phony (Ives) and a Debussy Fragment.” The New York Herald Tribune, January 31, 1927.
Source: Newspaper
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
A. Orchestral and Band Works

Glahn, Denise von

Year: 2004
Complete Citation:
Glahn, Denise von. “Musikalische Stadtlandschaft: Central Park in the Dark.” In Musik-Konzepte 123 —Charles Ives, edited by Ulrich Tadday, 89-108. Munich, Germany: Edition Text und Kritik, 2004.
Source: Chapter in Book
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
A. Orchestral and Band Works

Goodman, Alan

Year: 2005
Complete Citation:
Goodman, Alan. “A Bassoon Lite, Please... Eyeballing Mehta.” The Double Reed, Vol. 28, No. 4 (2005): 109-110.
Source: Journal
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
A. Orchestral and Band Works

Gould, Glenn

Year: 1965
Complete Citation:
Gould, Glenn. “The Ives Fourth.” High Fidelity/Musical America (1965): 96.
Source: Magazine
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
A. Orchestral and Band Works

Gratovich, Eugene

Year: 2004
Complete Citation:
Gratovich, Eugene. “Play It!: “Decoration Day” by Charles Ives (1912).” Strings, Vol. 19, No. 3 (2004): 24-25.
Source: Magazine
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
A. Orchestral and Band Works

Greenberg, Robert

Year: 2004
Complete Citation:
Greenberg, Robert. “Lecture 19: Charles Ives.” In The Symphony. Chantilly, VA: Teaching Company, 2004.
Source: Chapter in Book
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
A. Orchestral and Band Works

Hall, David

Year: 1965
Complete Citation:
Hall, David. “Premiere and Cultural Turning Point: Charles Ives’ Fourth Symphony: An Account of the History and Preparation of the Score, the Problematic Rehearsals, and the First Performance of an Almost Legendary Work.” HiFi/Stereo Review Review, July 1965), 55-58.
Source: Magazine
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
A. Orchestral and Band Works

Harbaum, Darrell

Year: 1991
Complete Citation:
Harbaum, Darrell. “Style Traits and Compositional Techniques as Found in the Symphonies.” Paper presented at Contemporary Music Festival: The Life and Works of Charles Ives. Longwood College, Department of Music, Farmville, Virginia, October 24-25, 1991.
Source: Conference paper
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
A. Orchestral and Band Works

Harrison, Lou

Year: 1946
Complete Citation:
Harrison, Lou. “On Quotation,” Modern Music, Vol. 23, No. 3 (Summer 1946).
Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
B. Musical Quotation or Borrowing

Hawes, Peter

Year: 1998
Complete Citation:
Hawes, Peter. “Learning to Love a Cranky Composer.” Yale Alumni Magazine (March 1998).
Notes:

A report of a pre-concert talk prior to a performance by the National Symphony Orchestra at the University of Arizona’s Centennial Hall in Tucson by Leonard Slatkin, the orchestra’s conductor. The Unanswered Question was on the program that evening. Slatkin’s remarks about Ives and Symphony No. 4 are somewhat negative. A general article prompted by the awarding of the first Charles Ives Living to Martin Bresnick.

Source: Magazine
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
A. Orchestral and Band Works

Henderson, Clayton W.

Year: 1974
Complete Citation:
Henderson, Clayton W. “Ives’ Use of Quotation.” Music Educators Journal 61/2 (October 1974): 24-28.
Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
B. Musical Quotation or Borrowing

Henerson, Clayton Wilson

Year: 1974
Complete Citation:
Henerson, Clayton Wilson. “Structural Importance of Borrowed Music in the Works of Charles Ives: A Preliminary Assessment.” In Report of the Eleventh Congress of the International Musicological Society held at Copenhagen, 1972, ed. Henrik Glahn et al., Vol. 1, 437-46. Copenhagen: Edition W. Hansen, 1974.
Source: Chapter in Book
VI. Topical Studies
B. Musical Quotation or Borrowing

Hermann, Bernard

Year: 1945
Complete Citation:
Hermann, Bernard. “Four Symphonies by Charles Ives.” Modern Music, vol. 22, no. 6 (November-December 1945).
Source: Journal
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
A. Orchestral and Band Works

Herrmann, Bernard

Year: 1945
Complete Citation:
Herrmann, Bernard. “Four Symphonies of Charles Ives.” Modern Music 22 (1945): 215-222.
Source: Journal
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
A. Orchestral and Band Works

Hewett, Ivan

Year: 2013
Complete Citation:
Hewett, Ivan. “The Latest in our Series on Short Works by the World’s Greatest Composers; Ivan Hewett’s Classic 50; no 21 Charles Ives - the Housatonic at Stockbridge.” Daily Telegraph, May 9, 2013, 27.
Source: Newspaper
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
A. Orchestral and Band Works

Hines, Robert Stephen, ed.

Year: 1970
Complete Citation:
Hines, Robert Stephen, ed. The Orchestral Composer's Point of View: Essays on Twentieth -Cen-tury Music by Those Who Wrote It, 39-60. Norman, OK: The University of Oklahoma Press, 1970.
Notes:

An untitled essay by Elliott Carter mentions Ives several times (40, 58), indicating the difficulties of performing Ives’s orchestral works as well as the expan-siveness of Ives's orchestral scores. Several passing remarks about Ives in the articles by Ross Lee Finney and Gunther Schuller [Remarks that Ives’s music was not being performed by orchestral musicians in the 1940s.]

Source: Book
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
A. Orchestral and Band Works