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Bibliography

Anderson, Deborah, choreographer and dancer

Year: 1986
Complete Citation:
Deborah Anderson, choreographer and dancer. Waiting (1986); Dance Theater Workshop. Music: Largo from Pre--First Violin Sonata.
Prf: 1986 August 15: New York; Studios, Bessie Schönberg Theater.
Source: Performance (ballet)
XII. Interdisciplinary Performances with Ives’s Music
B. Dance

Anderson, Jack

Year: 1985
Complete Citation:
Anderson, Jack. “City Ballet: ‘Poulenc Sonata’ and ‘Calcium Light Night’: Review.” The New York Times, 1985.
Source: Newspaper
XII. Interdisciplinary Performances with Ives’s Music
B. Dance
Year: 1989
Complete Citation:
Anderson, Jack. “Small-Town America.” The New York Times, February 14, 1989, sec. C, 16.
Source: Newspaper
XII. Interdisciplinary Performances with Ives’s Music
B. Dance
Year: 1993
Complete Citation:
Anderson, Jack. “A Dutch Tribute to Ives’s Life and Music.” The New York Times, October 14, 1993, sec. C, 18.
Source: Newspaper
XII. Interdisciplinary Performances with Ives’s Music
B. Dance
Year: 1999
Complete Citation:
Anderson, Jack. “Balanchine and Ives: Marriage of Mysteries.” The New York Times, June 15, 1999, sec. E, 5.
Source: Newspaper
XII. Interdisciplinary Performances with Ives’s Music
B. Dance

Anderson, William

Year: 1975
Complete Citation:
Anderson, William. “Editorially Speaking: Composer Charles Ives Enters History.” Stereo Review 34/3 (March 1975): 4.
Source: Magazine
X. Editing Practices and Articles Regarding Published Editions
A. Editing Practices

Austin, Larry

Year: 1976
Complete Citation:
Austin, Larry. “Reconstruction of Ives’ Universe Symphony.” In Desert Plants: Conversations with 23 American Musicians, interviewed by Walter Zimmermann, 207-220. Vancouver, BC: A.R.C. Publications, 1976.
Source: Chapter in Book
X. Editing Practices and Articles Regarding Published Editions
A. Editing Practices
Year: 1985
Complete Citation:
Austin, Larry. “Charles Ives’s Life Pulse Prelude for Percussion Orchestra: A Realization for Modem Performance from Sketches for His Universe Symphony.” Percussionist 23, no. 6 (1985): 58-84.
Source: Magazine
X. Editing Practices and Articles Regarding Published Editions
A. Editing Practices

Balanchine, George, and Francis Mason

Year: 1977
Complete Citation:
Balanchine, George, and Francis Mason. “Ivesiana.” In Balanchine’s Com-plete Stories of the Great Ballets. 2nd ed. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1977.
Source: Book
XII. Interdisciplinary Performances with Ives’s Music
B. Dance

Balanchine, George (choreographer)

Year: 1954
Complete Citation:
George Balanchine, choreographer. Ivesiana (1954); ballet; New York City Ballet Company. [Homage to Ives in the year of his death.]
Source: *Ballet
XII. Interdisciplinary Performances with Ives’s Music
B. Dance

Bales, Richard and Charles Seeger

Year: 1950
Complete Citation:
Bales, Richard and Charles Seeger. “Tone Roads No. 1 for Chamber Orchestra (performable also as chamber music).” New York: Peer International Corp., 1949. Notes 7/3 (June 1950): 432-433.
Source: Journal
X. Editing Practices and Articles Regarding Published Editions
A. Editing Practices

Barnes, Clive

Year: 1966
Complete Citation:
Barnes, Clive. “Dance: Ives sans Currier.” The New York Times, December 5, 1966, 65.
Source: Newspaper
XII. Interdisciplinary Performances with Ives’s Music
B. Dance

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

Beck, Jill

Year: 1985
Complete Citation:
Beck, Jill. “Principles and Techniques of Choreography: A Study of Five Choreographies from 1983.” Ph.D. diss., City University of New York, 1985.
Source: Ph.D. Dissertation
XII. Interdisciplinary Performances with Ives’s Music
B. Dance

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

Blankert, Beppie, choreographer

Year: 1993
Complete Citation:
Beppie Blankert, choreographer. Charles Ives Trilogy (1993); ballet. Based on the life of Charles Ives. Volume 1. “Charles." Music: songs, piano works, and violin sonatas. Volume 2. "Ives."Music: large ensemble music. For 13 musicians; Rutger van Leyden, director. Volume 3. “Dance Concert.” Music: Holidays Symphony; Serenity.
Source: Performance (dance)
XII. Interdisciplinary Performances with Ives’s Music
B. Dance

Block, Geoffrey

Year: 1997
Complete Citation:
Block, Geoffrey. “Remembrance of Dissonances Past: The Two Published Editions of Ives’s Concord Sonata.” In Ives Studies, edited by Philip Lambert, 27-50. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1997.
Source: Book
X. Editing Practices and Articles Regarding Published Editions
A. Editing Practices
Year: 1997
Complete Citation:
Block, Geoffrey. “Remembrance of Dissonances Past: The Two Published Editions of Ives’s Concord Sonata.” In Ives Studies, edited by Philip Lambert, 27-50. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press, 1997.
Source: Chapter in Book
X. Editing Practices and Articles Regarding Published Editions
A. Editing Practices

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