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Bibliography

Abott, Reverend Jacob

Year: 1834-1858
Complete Citation:
Reverend Abbott, Jacob. Rollo at Play, Rollo at School; Rollo at Work', Rollo Learning to Read; Rollo Learning to Talk; Rollo's Correspondence; Rollo's Experiments', Rollo's Museums', Rollo's Philosophy, Rollo's Vacations', and Rollo's Travels. Another group was devoted to Rollo's tours of Europe: Rollo on the Atlantic, Rollo in Holland', Rollo in London', Rollo in Naples; Rollo in Paris', Rollo in Scot-land', Rollo in Switzerland', Rollo on the Rhine', and Rollo in Genoa.
Source: Literary References
Reprints:

"Rollo," the name Ives called musicians unwilling to listen to advanced dissonances and other techniques found in modern music, was derived from a character in books (1834--1858) by Reverend Jacob Abbott. Rollo could understand only the simplest of situations that had been taught or had been explained to him in great detail. Original publishers include Boston, MA: Weeks, Jordan, and Company; Philadelphia, PA: Hogan & Thompson; Boston, MA: Gould, Kendall & Lincoln.

XIII. Ives in Literature
B. Fiction

Ashbee, Andrew

Year: 2016
Complete Citation:
Ashbee, Andrew. “James Shirley’s The Triumph of Peace Revisited.” The Consort: European Journal of Early Music, Vol. 72 (2016): 31-48.
Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
K. Stylistic Influences on Ives

Atlas, Allan W.

Year: 1996
Complete Citation:
Atlas, Allan W. The Wheatstone English Concertina in Victorian England. Oxford, United Kingdom: Clarendon Press, 1996.
Source: Book
VI. Topical Studies
K. Stylistic Influences on Ives

Bauer, Marion

Year: 1947
Complete Citation:
Bauer, Marion. “Charles Ives Receives Award.” Musical Leader 79/6 (June 1947): 9.
Notes:

Notice of Ives's receiving the Pulitzer Prize for Symphony No. 3. Includes remarks about his being ignored and overlooked.

Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
V. Awards

Beckwith, Ethel

Year: 1947
Complete Citation:
Beckwith, Ethel. “Pulitzer Prize Winner Scoffs at $1,000 Award.” Sunday Herald (Bridgeport, Connecticut), May 11, 1947, 1, 16.
Source: Newspaper
VI. Topical Studies
V. Awards

Bernstein, Leonard

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

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

Burkholder, J. Peter

Complete Citation:
Burkholder, J. Peter. “Introduction: “A Continuing Spirit.”” In Charles Ives and the Classical Tradition, edited by Geoffrey Block and J. Peter Burkholder, 1-8. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1996.
Source: Chapter in Book
VI. Topical Studies
K. Stylistic Influences on Ives
Year: 1996
Complete Citation:
Burkholder, J. Peter. “Ives and the Four Musical Traditions.” In Charles Ives and His World, 3-34. Edited by J. Peter Burkholder. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1996.
Source: Chapter in Book
VI. Topical Studies
K. Stylistic Influences on Ives

Cowell, Henry

Year: 1925
Complete Citation:
Cowell, Henry. “The Value of Eclecticism.” Sackbut 5, no. 9 (1925): 264--265.
Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
K. Stylistic Influences on Ives

DeVenney, David P.

Year: 1999
Complete Citation:
DeVenney, David P. “The End of the Century: Impressionism and the Flowering of Roman-ticism.” In Varied Carols: A Survey of American Choral Literature, 105-109. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1999.
Notes:

In Chapter 5, “The End of the Century: Impressionism and the Flowering of Roman-ticism,” some details are given about General William Booth Enters into Heaven, Psalm 90, Psalm 24, Psalm 54, Psalm 135, The Celestial Country, and Three Harvest Home Chorales.

Source: Chapter in Book
VI. Topical Studies
K. Stylistic Influences on Ives

Duane, Ben

Year: 2013
Complete Citation:
Duane, Ben. “Auditory Streaming Cues in Eighteenth- and Early Nineteenth-Century String Quartets: A Corpus-Based Study.” Music Perception: An Interdisciplinary Journal 31/1 (2013): 46-58.
Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
K. Stylistic Influences on Ives

Duke, Vernon

Year: 1937
Complete Citation:
Duke, Vernon. “Musicalantics and Antiques.” Stage (March 1937): 78.
Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
K. Stylistic Influences on Ives

Gann, Kyle

Year: 1991
Complete Citation:
Gann, Kyle. “Pulitzer Hacks: Amateur Composers versus the Profes-sionals.” Village Voice, July 30, 1991.
Notes:

Cites the story from Milton Babbitt that Ives was not a professional composer.

Source: Newspaper
VI. Topical Studies
V. Awards
Year: 1992
Complete Citation:
Gann, Kyle. “Composer’s Clearing House: The Pulitzer Prize.” Village Voice, May 5, 1992.
Notes:

Claims Lou Harrison urged Ives to “expunge the 'ex-perimental' parts of the Third Symphony” [i.e., “shadow parts”].

Source: Newspaper
VI. Topical Studies
V. Awards

Glöckler, Ralph Roger

Year: 2012
Complete Citation:
Glöckler, Ralph Roger. Mr. Ives und die Vettern vierten Grades: Roman. Berlin, Germany: Elfenbein, 2012.
Source: Book
XIII. Ives in Literature
B. Fiction

Hüppe, Eberhard

Year: 2012
Complete Citation:
Hüppe, Eberhard. “Charles Ives’ Entkoppelung von Europa.” In Urbanisierte Musik: eine Studie über gesellschaftliche Determinanten musikalischer Raumproduktion und Raumaneignung. Münster, Germany: Verlagshaus Monsenstein und Vannerdat, 2012.
Source: Book
VI. Topical Studies
K. Stylistic Influences on Ives

Johnson, Marc E.

Year: 2002
Complete Citation:
Johnson, Marc E. “Charles Ives’s (Utopian, Pragmatist, Nostalgic, Progressive, Romantic, Modernist) Yankee Realism.” American Music 20.2 (Summer 2002): 188-233.
Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
K. Stylistic Influences on Ives

Johnson, Owen

Year: 1912
Complete Citation:
Johnson, Owen. Stover at Yale. Boston, MA: Little, Brown, 1912.
Source: Book
XIII. Ives in Literature
B. Fiction

Karl, Frederick R.

Year: 1985
Complete Citation:
Karl, Frederick R. Modern and Modernism: The Sovereignty of the Artist, 1885-1925, 337. New York, NY: Atheneum, 1985.
Notes:

“In America, Charles Ives was, without direct awareness of European developments, pursuing his own forms of Modernism,” (340-341).

Source: Book
VI. Topical Studies
K. Stylistic Influences on Ives