Kramer, Lawrence
Year: 1993
Complete Citation:
Kramer, Lawrence. “Ives’s Misogyny and Post-Reconstruction America.” Paper presented at Feminist Theory and Music: Toward a Common Language. Minneapolis, Minnesota, June, 1991.Source: Conference Paper
VI. Topical Studies
S. Reception Studies and Related Scholarship
Year: 1996
Complete Citation:
Kramer, Lawrence. “Powers of Blackness: Africanist Discourse in Mod-ern Concert Music.” Black Music Research Journal 16/1 (Spring 1996): 53-70.Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
S. Reception Studies and Related Scholarship
Kupferberg, Herbert
Year: 1974
Complete Citation:
Kupferberg, Herbert. “Ives Centennial Hits Crescendo.” National Observer, October 26, 1974: 26.Source: Newspaper
VI. Topical Studies
S. Reception Studies and Related Scholarship
Lambert. J. Philip
Year: 1989
Complete Citation:
Lambert. J. Philip. “Communications.” Journal of the American Musicological Society 42/1 (Spring 1989): 204-209.Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
S. Reception Studies and Related Scholarship
Lederman, Minna
Year: 1983
Complete Citation:
Lederman, Minna. The Life and Death of a Small Magazine (Modern Music, 1924-46). No. 18. I.S.A.M. Monographs. Brooklyn: Institute for Studies in American Music, 1983.Source: Book
VI. Topical Studies
S. Reception Studies and Related Scholarship
Lerch, Louise
Year: 1996
Complete Citation:
Lerch, Louise. “Music “Reviews: “Forty Earlier Songs,” by Charles E. Ives, edited by John Kirkpatrick.”” Journal of Singing: The Official Journal of the National Association of Teachers of Singing, Vol. 53, No. 1 (1996): 55.Source: Journal
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
E. Songs
Low, Ruth
Year: 1961
Complete Citation:
Low, Ruth. “Ives Not Appreciated Until End of His Life.” Danbury News-Times, April 15, 1961, 1.Source: Newspaper
VI. Topical Studies
S. Reception Studies and Related Scholarship
Manulkina, Olga
Year: 2017
Complete Citation:
Manulkina, Olga. “Leonard Bernstein’s 1959 Triumph in the Soviet Union.” In The Rite of Spring at 100, edited by Severine Neff et al., 219-236. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 2017.Source: Chapter in Book
VI. Topical Studies
S. Reception Studies and Related Scholarship
McDonald, Matthew
Year: 2012
Complete Citation:
McDonald, Matthew. “Ives and the Now.” In Music and Narrative since 1900, edited by Michael L. Klein and Nicholas Reyland, 285-307. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 2012.Source: Chapter in Book
VI. Topical Studies
S. Reception Studies and Related Scholarship
McGinness, John
Year: 2006
Complete Citation:
McGinness, John. 2006. “Essay: Has Modernist Criticism Failed Charles Ives?” Music Theory Spectrum 28: 99-109.Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
S. Reception Studies and Related Scholarship
Year: 2006
Complete Citation:
McGinness, John. “How Modernist Criticism Failed Charles Ives.” Music Theory Spectrum 28/1 (Spring 2006): 99-109.Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
S. Reception Studies and Related Scholarship
Meine, Sabine
Year: 1992
Complete Citation:
Meine, Sabine. “Scenes from My Childhood Are with Me...Biographische Momente in den 114 Songs von Charles E. Ives.” Musik und Bildung: Praxis Musikerzeitung 24/3 (May-June 1992): 9-13.Source: Journal
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
E. Songs
Meister, Barbara
Year: 1980
Complete Citation:
Meister, Barbara. An Introduction to the Art Song, 189-191. New York, NY: Taplinger Publishing Company, 1980.Notes: Discusses When General William Booth Enters into Heaven, “probably the most representative of the lot” (i.e., the songs], 190 (considers The Chil-dren's Hour, The Circus Band, The Greatest Man, The Housatonic at Stockbridge (“One of Ives's most evocative songs...an atmospheric, moody piece of simple serenity. One senses reverie, time suspended, peace.”), In Flanders Fields, The Last Reader, Maple Leaves, The Side- Show, They Are There!,The Things Our Fathers Loved, Tom Sails Away, Two Little Flowers), 191 (“He was the first major thoroughly American composer”).
Source: Book
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
E. Songs
Meyer, Felix
Year: 2000
Complete Citation:
Meyer, Felix. “Transformation and adaptation: the evolution of Charles Ives's song “From ‘Paracelsus.’” In The Rosaleen Moldenhauer memorial: music history from primary sources: a guide to the Moldenhauer Archives. Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress, 2000.Source: Chapter in Book
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
E. Songs
Year: 2003
Complete Citation:
Meyer, Felix. “Adaption - Transformation - Rekomposition. Zu Einigen Liedbearbeitungen Von Charles Ives.” Archiv Für Musikwissenschaft, vol. 60, no. 2 (2003): 115-135.Source: Journal
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
E. Songs
Year: 2003
Complete Citation:
Meyer, Felix. Adaptation - Transformation - Rekomposition: zu einigen Liedbearbeitungen von Charles Ives. Stuttgart, Germany: Franz Steiner Verlag, 2003.Source: Book
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
E. Songs
Miller, Kenneth E.
Year: 1983
Complete Citation:
Miller, Kenneth E. Principles of Singing, 198. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Pren-tice-Hall, 1983.Notes: Discusses When Stars Are in the Quiet Skies.
Source: Book
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
E. Songs
Murphy, Scott
Year: 2008
Complete Citation:
Murphy, Scott. “A Composite Approach to Ives’ ‘Cage.’” Twentieth Century Music 5.2 (September 2008): 179-193.Source: Journal
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
E. Songs
Nathan, Hans
Year: 1960
Complete Citation:
Nathan, Hans. “The Modern Period—United States of America.” In A History of Song, edited by Denis Stevens, 431-437. New York, NY: W.W. Norton, 1960.Source: Chapter in Book
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
E. Songs
Newman, Philip Edward
Year: 1967
Complete Citation:
Newman, Philip Edward. “The Songs of Charles Ives,” Ph.D. diss., University of Iowa, 1967.Source: Ph.D. Dissertation
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
E. Songs