Schuld, Diana Boe
Year: 1971
Complete Citation:
Schuld, Diana Boe. “The influence of transcendentalism upon the Music of Charles Ives.” M.A. Thesis, Hofstra University, 1971.Source: M.A. Thesis
B. Theses
Schwartz, Elliott
Year: 1975
Complete Citation:
Schwartz, Elliott. “Directions in American Composition Since the Second World War: Part I—1945-1960.” Music Educator’s Journal 61/6 (February 1975): 29-39.Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
E. Comparisons and Relationships with Other Composers, Artists, and Writers
Schwarz, Boris
Year: 1975
Complete Citation:
Schwarz, Boris. “Schoenberg—und Ives—Tagunen in den USA.” Österreichische Musikzeitschrift 30 (January-February 1975): 67-68.Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
E. Comparisons and Relationships with Other Composers, Artists, and Writers
Schwarz, K. Robert
Year: 1993
Complete Citation:
Schwarz, K. Robert. “Composers’ Closets Open for All to See.” The New York Times, June 19, 1993, sec. 2, 1.Source: Newspaper
VI. Topical Studies
E. Comparisons and Relationships with Other Composers, Artists, and Writers
Secrest, Meryle
Year: 1994
Complete Citation:
Secrest, Meryle. Leonard Bernstein: A Life, 249, 268. New York, NY: Alfred A. Knopf, 1994.Notes: Discusses Symphony No. 2 and The Unanswered Question in Russia.
Source: Book
VI. Topical Studies
E. Comparisons and Relationships with Other Composers, Artists, and Writers
Seeger, Charles
Year: 1939
Complete Citation:
Seeger, Charles. “Grass Roots for American Composers.” Modern Music 16 (March-April 1939): 143-149.Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
E. Comparisons and Relationships with Other Composers, Artists, and Writers
Year: 1939
Complete Citation:
Seeger, Charles. “Charles Ives and Carl Ruggles.” Magazine of Art 32 (July 1939): 396-399, 435-437.Source: Magazine
VI. Topical Studies
E. Comparisons and Relationships with Other Composers, Artists, and Writers
Year: 1940
Complete Citation:
Seeger, Charles. “Henry Cowell.” Magazine of Art 33 (May 1940): 288-89, 322-25, 327.Source: Magazine
VI. Topical Studies
E. Comparisons and Relationships with Other Composers, Artists, and Writers
Semler, Isabella Parker
Year: 1942
Complete Citation:
Semler, Isabella Parker. Horatio Parker: A Memoir for His Grandchildren. New York, NY: G.P. Putnam & Sons.Source: Book
VI. Topical Studies
E. Comparisons and Relationships with Other Composers, Artists, and Writers
Senick, John Peter
Year: 1982
Complete Citation:
Senick, John Peter. “An analysis of selected songs of Charles Ives.” M.A. Thesis, Syracuse University, 1982.Source: M.A. Thesis
VIII. Dissertations, Theses, and Baccalaureate Essays
B. Theses
Serebrier, Jose
Year: 1979
Complete Citation:
Serebrier, José. “Jose Serebrier on Ives.” In Conductors on Conducting. Frenchtown, NJ: Columbia Publishing Company, 1979.Source: Chapter in Book
VI. Topical Studies
E. Comparisons and Relationships with Other Composers, Artists, and Writers
Serio, John N.
Year: 1979
Complete Citation:
Serio, John N. “The ultimate music is abstract: Charles Ives and Wallace Stevens.” Lewisburg, PA: Bucknell University Press, 1979.VI. Topical Studies
E. Comparisons and Relationships with Other Composers, Artists, and Writers
Sharp, Mary Elizabeth
Year: 1979
Complete Citation:
Sharp, Mary Elizabeth. “A Survey of Musical Quotation from 1940-1975.” M.M. thesis, University of Louisville, 1979.Notes: References to Ives: in Part 1, “Introduction”: “The use of common material such as folk tunes, hymns, and patriotic songs will not be included since the music is not from the concert tradition. However, this creates a problem of inconsistency in some cases. Charles Ives quotes music from popular material together with concert pieces which have programmatic signifi-cance.”; in Part 5, “Early Twentieth-Century Practices in the Use of Quotation”: “The very same motive (Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5) is quoted by Ives in the Concord Sonata and is used as a cyclic device to depict fate and the character of Beethoven himself’; and in Parts 7-10, “Charles Ives' Use of Quotation.”
Source: M.M. Thesis
VIII. Dissertations, Theses, and Baccalaureate Essays
B. Theses
Shelton, Gregory Allard
Year: 1985
Complete Citation:
Shelton, Gregory Allard. An analysis of Charles Ives’s Three-page Sonata for Piano. M.A. Thesis, The American University, 1985.Source: M.A. Thesis
VIII. Dissertations, Theses, and Baccalaureate Essays
B. Theses
Shreffler, Anne
Year: 1994
Complete Citation:
Shreffler, Anne. “Elliott Carter and His America.” Sonus 14/2 (Spring 1994): 38-66.Notes: See 51-58 regarding the influence of Ives that “looms largest in Carter's music.”
Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
E. Comparisons and Relationships with Other Composers, Artists, and Writers
Shreffler, Anne Chatoney
Year: 1994
Complete Citation:
Shreffler, Anne Chatoney. “Elliott Carter and his America.” Sonus 14/2 (Spring 1994): 38-66.Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
E. Comparisons and Relationships with Other Composers, Artists, and Writers
Shulman, Ivan
Year: 2008
Complete Citation:
Shulman, Ivan. “Symphony no. 2 by Charles Ives: An Historic Review and Consideration of Performance Practice.” M.M. thesis, California State University at Long Beach, 2008.Source: M.M. Thesis
VIII. Dissertations, Theses, and Baccalaureate Essays
B. Theses
Shultis, Christopher
Year: 1998
Complete Citation:
Shultis, Christopher. Silencing the Sounded Self: John Cage and the Ameri-can Experimental Tradition, 3-4. 14-28, and passim.. Boston, MA: Northeastern University Press, 1998.Source: Book
VI. Topical Studies
E. Comparisons and Relationships with Other Composers, Artists, and Writers
Year: 2013
Complete Citation:
Shultis, Christopher. Silencing the sounded self: John Cage and the American experimental tradition. Lebanon, NH: University Press of New England, 2013.Source: Book
VI. Topical Studies
E. Comparisons and Relationships with Other Composers, Artists, and Writers
Year: 2014
Complete Citation:
Christopher Shultis. “Robert Morris and the Missing Middle.” Perspectives of New Music 52/2 (2014): 316-324.Source: Journal
VI. Topical Studies
E. Comparisons and Relationships with Other Composers, Artists, and Writers