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Bibliography

Berlin, Edward

Year: 2002
Complete Citation:
Edward Berlin. “Maple Leaf Rag and Its Origins.” Paper read at a Sym-posium during the Scott Joplin Ragtime Festival (June 7: Sedalia, MO; First United Methodist Church).
Notes:

Includes references to Ives’s ragtime pieces.

Source: Festival
VI. Topical Studies
B. Musical Quotation or Borrowing

Berlin, Edward A.

Year: 1980
Complete Citation:
Berlin, Edward A.. Ragtime: A Musical and Cultural History. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1980.
Notes:

References are taken primarily from the Memos (23) and Essays Before a Sonata (49).

Source: Book
VI. Topical Studies
B. Musical Quotation or Borrowing

Bermúdez, Santiago Martín

Year: 2007
Complete Citation:
Bermúdez, Santiago Martín. “Encuentros: Henri Dutilleux - “Lo importante es eschuchar algo que te sorprenda.”” Scherzo: Revista de Música, Vol. 22 (2007): 140-142.
Source: Magazine
VI. Topical Studies
E. Comparisons and Relationships with Other Composers, Artists, and Writers

Bernstein, Leonard

Complete Citation:
Leonard Bernstein, narrator/conductor. Charles Ives: American Pioneer, Sony Classical Video Music Education, 1993. 60 minutes. From CBS-TV telecast.
Notes:

Performances included The Gong on the Hook and Ladder, or Firemen's Parade on Main Street; "Washington's Birthday" from A Symphony: Holidays; The Circus Band March; and The Unan- swered Question. Also included Lincoln, the Great Commoner (Simon Estes, bass-baritone; Leonard Bernstein, piano

Source: Videocassette
XV. Television Broadcasts, Films, and Videocassettes
C. Videocassettes
Year: 1976
Complete Citation:
Bernstein, Leonard. The Unanswered Question: Six Talks at Harvard. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1976.
Source: Book
VI. Topical Studies
E. Comparisons and Relationships with Other Composers, Artists, and Writers
Year: 1982
Complete Citation:
Bernstein, Leonard. “The Absorption of Race Elements into American Music.” In Findings: Fifty Years of Meditations on Music, 36-99. New York, NY: Doubleday, 1982.
Source: Book
VI. Topical Studies
K. Stylistic Influences on Ives

Bernstein, Leonard, narrator/conductor

Year: 1992
Complete Citation:
Leonard Bernstein, narrator/conductor. The Unanswered Question, lec-ture series at Harvard University, Cambridge, MA. Videocassettes and DVDs (Princeton, NJ: Kultur International Films, Ltd., 1992): "The Twentieth Century Crises?"
Notes:

Includes excerpts from The Unanswered Question.

Source: Videocassette
XV. Television Broadcasts, Films, and Videocassettes
C. Videocassettes

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

Bessom, Malcolm E.

Year: 1974
Complete Citation:
Bessom, Malcolm E. “Overtones.” Music Educator's Journal 61/2 (October 1974): 5.
Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
T. Ives in Music Education

Betz, Marianne

Year: 2004
Complete Citation:
Betz, Marianne. “The Voice of the City: New York in Der Musik Von Charles Ives.” Archiv Für Musikwissenschaft, vol. 61, no. 3 (2004): 207-225.
Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
M. Ives and Manhattan

Birkby, Arthur

Year: 1974
Complete Citation:
Birkby, Arthur. “Ives, the Organist.” Clavier 13/7 (1974): 29-30.
Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
N. Ives’ Childhood

Black, Leo

Year: 2010
Complete Citation:
Black, Leo. “Harry Croft-Jackson: with a note on Charles Ives.” In BBC music in the Glock era and after: a memoir, edited by Christopher Wintle and Kate Hopkins. London, United Kingdom: Cosman Keller Art and Music Trust: in association with Plumbago Books; Rochester, NY: Distribution, Boydell & Brewer, 2010.
Source: Chapter in Book
VI. Topical Studies
E. Comparisons and Relationships with Other Composers, Artists, and Writers

Blanding, Thomas

Year: 1994
Complete Citation:
Blanding, Thomas. “Music of the Higher Spheres: The Philoso-phy and Influence of New England Transcendentalists.” In American Transcendentalists [Program Booklet]. Brooklyn Philharmonic Orchestra, Brooklyn Academy of Music, Brooklyn, New York, November 11-13, 1994. Da Camera of Houston, The Menil Collection, Houston, Texas, November 21-22, 1994.
Source: Program Booklet
VI. Topical Studies
A. Transcendentalism or Philosophy

Block, Geoffrey

Year: 1996
Complete Citation:
Block, Geoffrey. “Ives and the ‘Sounds that Beethoven Didn't Have.’” In Charles Ives and the Classical Tradition, edited by Geoffrey Block and J. Peter Burkholder, 34-50. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1996.
Source: Chapter in Book
VI. Topical Studies
K. Stylistic Influences on Ives
Year: 2008
Complete Citation:
Block, Geoffrey. “Bernstein's Senior Thesis At Harvard: The Roots of a Lifelong Search to Discover an American Identity.” College Music Symposium, vol. 48 (2008): 52-68. 
Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
E. Comparisons and Relationships with Other Composers, Artists, and Writers

Block, Geoffrey and J. Peter Burkholder, eds.

Year: 1996
Complete Citation:
Block, Geoffrey, and J. Peter Burkholder, eds. “Contemporary Views of Ives and His Music: Profiles 1932-1955.” In Charles Ives and His World, 363-442. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1996.
Source: Chapter in Book
VI. Topical Studies
S. Reception Studies and Related Scholarship

Bloom, Harold

Complete Citation:
Bloom, Harold. A Map of Misreading. New York: Oxford University Press, 1975: 162.
Notes:

Only one reference to Ives: "The war of American poets against influence is part of our Emersonian heritage, manifested first in the great triad of 'The Divinity School Address,' 'The American Schol-ar,' and ‘Self--Reliance.' This heritage can be traced in Thoreau, Whit-man, Dickinson and quite directly again in Robinson and Frost, in the architectural writings of Sullivan and Wright, in the Essays Before a Sonata of Charles Ives. The less direct heritage is more relevant to any brooding on the negative aspects of poetic influence, centering partly on Pound and Williams (where it is refracted through Whitman) and partly on Stevens, who disliked the very idea of influence."

Source: Chapter in Book
VI. Topical Studies
A. Transcendentalism or Philosophy

Blum, Robert Stephen

Year: 1977
Complete Citation:
Blum, Robert Stephen. “Ives’s Position in Social and Musical History.” The Musical Quarterly 63 (1977): 459-482.
Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
S. Reception Studies and Related Scholarship

Blum, Stephen

Year: 1985
Complete Citation:
Blum, Stephen. “Charles Ives and American Ethnomusicology.” Paper presented at Joint annual meeting of AMS and SEM. Vancouver, Canada, 1985.
Source: Conference paper
VI. Topical Studies
S. Reception Studies and Related Scholarship

Bohlman, Philip V.

Year: 2005
Complete Citation:
Bohlman, Philip V. “Introduction.” In Music in American Religious Experience, edited by Bohlman, Philip V., Edith L. Blumhofer, and Maria M. Chow. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press, 2005.
Source: Newsletter
VI. Topical Studies
A. Transcendentalism or Philosophy