Leonard Bernstein and the language of jazz /

For Leonard Bernstein, music was a language capable of communicating more directly than in words, and jazz was a crucial part of his musical vocabulary. As an idiom made up of a range of styles - whether stride, boogie-woogie, swing, bebop, or cool - jazz was central to Bernstein's compositiona...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Baber, Katherine A., 1981- (Author)
Published: University of Illinois Press,
Publisher Address: Urbana, IL :
Publication Dates: [2019]
Literature type: Book
Language: English
Series: Music in American life.
Subjects:
Summary: For Leonard Bernstein, music was a language capable of communicating more directly than in words, and jazz was a crucial part of his musical vocabulary. As an idiom made up of a range of styles - whether stride, boogie-woogie, swing, bebop, or cool - jazz was central to Bernstein's compositional aesthetic, particularly in his approach to tonality and to defining American music. The blues, as a special part of this jazz idiom, also helped Bernstein articulate a personal identity, expressing everything from sensuality to humor to loss and isolation. This text will examine the shifting meanings of Bernstein's jazz language in theatrical and symphonic works from across his career.
Carrier Form: x, 268 pages : music ; 23 cm.
Bibliography: Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN: 9780252084164
0252084160
9780252042379
0252042379
Index Number: ML410
CLC: J605.712
Call Number: J605.712/B113
Contents: Bernstein's philosophy and the language of jazz -- Trading fours : Bernstein, Copland, Gershwin, and jazz -- A jazz-shaped America : swing styles in Fancy Free and On the Town -- Jazz as a rhetoric of conflict in Symphony no. 2 : The Age of Anxiety -- West Side Story, modern jazz, and the musical commitment -- "Red, white and blues" : Bernstein's blues and the American soul -- Conclusion.