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Bibliography

Baron, Carol K.

Year: 1991
Complete Citation:
Baron, Carol K. “Ives and the Concord Transcendentalists.” Paper presented at Charles Ives: A Yankee Genius or Musical Fraud. Charles Ives Center, Danbury, Connecticut, October 1991.
Source: Conference paper
VI. Topical Studies
A. Transcendentalism or Philosophy

Becker, Dr. John H.

Year: 1933
Complete Citation:
Becker, John H. “Charles E. Ives: Musical Philosopher.” Northwest Musical Herald (January 1933): 5-6.
Notes:

Available at the Yale University Music Library Archival Collection. “Charles Ives Papers” Mss. 14/41; 14/56/2; 41/112.

Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
A. Transcendentalism or Philosophy

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

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

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

Broyles, Michael

Year: 2004
Complete Citation:
Broyles, Michael. “Looking Back: Puritanism, Geography, and the Myth of American Individualism.” In Mavericks and Other Traditions in American Music, 271-296. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2004.
Source: Chapter in Book
VI. Topical Studies
A. Transcendentalism or Philosophy

Broyles, Michael and Denise Von Glahn

Year: 1999
Complete Citation:
Broyles, Michael, and Denise Von Glahn. 1999. “Later Manifestations of Concord: Charles Ives and the Transcendentalist Tradition.” In Transient and Permanent: The Transcendentalist Movement and its Contexts, edited by Charles Capper and Conrad Edick Wright, 574-604. Studies in American History and Culture, No. 5. Boston, MA: Massachusetts Historical Society.
Source: Book
VI. Topical Studies
A. Transcendentalism or Philosophy

Bruhn, Christopher

Year: 2004
Complete Citation:
Bruhn, Christopher. “Refracting History: Ives and Emerson and the German Romantic Tradition in American Music.” Paper presented at A Century of Composing in America: 1820-1920. The City University of New York, The Graduate Center, New York, New York, October, 2004.
Source: Conference Paper
VI. Topical Studies
A. Transcendentalism or Philosophy

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

Buk, False

Year: 2007
Complete Citation:
Buk, False. “A outra América (do Norte): Ives, Cage e os transcendentalistas 1.” Claves, no. 4 (November 2007): 91-96.
VI. Topical Studies
A. Transcendentalism or Philosophy

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

Cavell, Stanley, Barbara Packer, Thomas Dumm, Elizabeth Johns, James Conant, and Ann Lauterbach [participants]

Year: 1996
Complete Citation:
Cavell, Stanley, Barbara Packer, Thomas Dumm, Elizabeth Johns, James Conant, and Ann Lauterbach [participants]. “Transcendentalism and American Culture.” In Charles Ives and His World Festival, edited by J. Peter Burkholder, 38-39. Annandale-on-Hudson, New York; Bard College, August 9-11, 16-18, 1996.
Source: Chapter in Festival Publication
VI. Topical Studies
A. Transcendentalism or Philosophy

Charles, Daniel

Year: 1992
Complete Citation:
Charles, Daniel. “Emerson Selon Charles Ives.” Critique: Revue Générale Des Publications Françaises Et Étrangères (1992): 513.
Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
A. Transcendentalism or Philosophy

Chmaj, Betty E.

Year: 1983
Complete Citation:
Chmaj, Betty E.. “Abstract: How Charles Ives Put Down the Concord Bards.” Sonneck Society for American Music Bulletin (Summer 1983) 9: 39.
Notes:

Regarding Sonata No. 2, “Concord, Mass., 1840-1860,” for piano.

Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
A. Transcendentalism or Philosophy
Year: 1984
Complete Citation:
Chmaj, Betty E. “Abstract: ‘As I Was Saying’: Charles Ives and the Concord Connection.” Sonneck Society for American Music Bulletin (Fall 1984) 10: 63-64.
Notes:

Regarding the Concord Sonata.

Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
A. Transcendentalism or Philosophy
Year: 1986
Complete Citation:
Chmaj, Betty E. “The Journey and the Mirror: Emerson and the American Arts.” In Prospects 10: An Annual of American Culture Studies, edited by Jack Salzman, 353-408. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press, 1985.
Source: Chapter in Book
VI. Topical Studies
A. Transcendentalism or Philosophy

Cole, Michael S.

Year: 1997
Complete Citation:
Cole, Michael S. “Concord Revisited: Charles Ives and the American Transcendentalists [Abstract].” Canadian Journal for Traditional Music, Vol. 25 (1997): 29.
Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
A. Transcendentalism or Philosophy

Crunden, Robert Morse

Year: 1982
Complete Citation:
Crunden, Robert Morse. Ministers of Reform: The Progressives’ Achieve-ment in American Civilization, 1889-1920. New York, NY: Basic Books, 1982.
Source: Book
Reprints:

Crunden, Robert Morse. <i>Ministers of Reform: The Progressives’ Achieve-ment in American Civilization, 1889-1920</i>. Urbana, Illinois: University of Illi-nois Press, 1984.

VI. Topical Studies
A. Transcendentalism or Philosophy

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