Johnson, Timothy A.
Year: 2004
Complete Citation:
Johnson, Timothy A. Baseball and the Music of Charles Ives: A Proving Ground. Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press, 2004.Source: Book
III. Book-Length Studies
B. Other
Karolyi, Otto
Year: 1996
Source: Chapter in Book
III. Book-Length Studies
B. Other
Kirkpatrick, John
Year: 1983
Complete Citation:
Kirkpatrick, John. 1983. “Commentary.” In Charles Ives, I Come to Thee: SATB with Organ, edited by John Kirkpatrick. New York, NY: Associated Music Publishers.Source: Commentary to score
D. Choral Works
Koch, Gerhard R.
Year: 1975
Complete Citation:
Koch, Gerhard R. “‘Das himmlische Land’ von Ives.” Musica 29, no. 3 (1975): 230-233.Source: Journal
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
D. Choral Works
Kumlien, Wendell C.
Year: 1974
Complete Citation:
Kumlien, Wendell C. “The Music for Chorus.” Music Educators Journal 61/2 (1974): 48-52.Source: Journal
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
D. Choral Works
Lamb, Gordon H.
Year: 1974
Complete Citation:
Lamb, Gordon H. “Charles Ives 1874-1954.” Choral Journal 15/2 (October 1974): 12-13.Source: Journal
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
D. Choral Works
Year: 1975
Complete Citation:
Lamb, Gordon H. “Charles Ives: The Man and His Music Interview with Robert Shaw.” Choral Journal 15, no. 8 (April 1975).Source: Journal
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
D. Choral Works
Year: 1975
Complete Citation:
Lamb, Gordon H. “Charles Ives: The Man and His Music. Interview with Robert Shaw.” Choral Journal 15/8 (April 1975): 5-7.Source: Journal
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
D. Choral Works
Lambert, Philip
Year: 1997
Complete Citation:
Lambert, Philip. “The Music of Charles Ives.” New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1997.Source: Book
III. Book-Length Studies
B. Other
Year: 1997
Complete Citation:
Lambert, Philip. The Music of Charles Ives. Composers of the Twen-tieth Century, series edited by Allen Forte. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1997.Notes: Includes analyses of Tone Roads No. 1, Study No. 5, and The Cage.
Source: Book
III. Book-Length Studies
B. Other
Year: 2001
Complete Citation:
Lambert, Philip. The Music of Charles Ives. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1997.Source: Journal
III. Book-Length Studies
B. Other
Lambert, Philip, ed.
Year: 1997
Complete Citation:
Lambert, Philip, ed. Charles Ives Studies. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press, 1997.Source: Book
III. Book-Length Studies
B. Other
Lambert, Philip (editor)
Year: 1997
Complete Citation:
Lambert, Philip, ed. Ives Studies. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1997.Source: Book
III. Book-Length Studies
B. Other
Magee, Gayle Sherwood
Year: 2008
Complete Citation:
Magee, Gayle Sherwood. Charles Ives Reconsidered. Music in American Life. Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 2008.Source: Book
III. Book-Length Studies
B. Other
Mauldin, Walt
Year: 1991
Complete Citation:
Mauldin, Walt. “The Influence of Gregg Smith on Twentieth-Century Choral Literature as a Composer and Conductor.” The Bulletin of Historical Research in Music Education 12/2 (1991): 83-99.Source: Journal
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
D. Choral Works
McCray, James
Year: 1996
Complete Citation:
McCray, James. “Music for Voices and Organ: Psalm 14.” The Diapason, Vol. 87, No. 1 (1996): 8.Source: Journal
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
D. Choral Works
McDonald, Matthew James
Year: 2014
Complete Citation:
McDonald, Matthew James. Breaking Time’s Arrow: Experiment and Expression in the Music of Charles Ives. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 2014.Source: Book
III. Book-Length Studies
B. Other
Mussulman, Joseph A.
Year: 1979
Complete Citation:
Mussulman, Joseph A. Dear People ... Robert Shaw: A Biography. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1979.Notes: Relates the story of the per-formance of Harvest Home Chorales and Psalm 67 (1948 April), with Shaw's letter to the Collegiate Chorale members about the difficulty of the music and Mrs. Ives's letter to Shaw; lists Ives as a donor to the New Friends of Music, supporters of the Collegiate Chorale (76-78); tells of performing the middle section of Psalm 90: "Teach us to num-ber our days,"on the 1967 tour of the Robert Shaw Chorale, as an en- core in Chicago's Orchestra Hall (163). In Chapter 10, "The Second Battle of Atlanta," there is much discussion of Shaw's choosing to per- form contemporary music and the conflicts that caused with the [Atlan-ta] Symphony [Orchestra] Board of Sponsors. "Of the nearly one hund-red titles on the [orchestra's] combined Romantic and Subscription series, only thirty-four belonged chronologically to the twentieth- century. But fourteen of them, plus two dated before 1900, bore the one name that could itself evoke in timid ears an insufferable din, and in tightly closed minds a most delicious loathing: Charles Ives!" (223).
Source: Book
Reprints: Mussulman, Joseph A. <i>Dear People ... Robert Shaw: A Biography</i>. Chapel Hill, NC: Hinshaw Music, 1996.
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
D. Choral Works
Myler, Derek J.
Year: 2019
Complete Citation:
Myler, Derek J. “Charles Ives and Techniques of Choral Narrative: Exploring Three Harvest Home Chorales.” The Choral Journal, vol. 59, no. (2019): 8-29.Source: Journal
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
D. Choral Works
Orr, N. Lee
Year: 1996
Complete Citation:
Orr, N. Lee. “Research Report.” Choral Journal, Vol. 37, No. 3 (1996): 49-52.Source: Journal
IV. Individual Studies by Genre
D. Choral Works