Music: An Appreciation, Brief Edition Author: Roger Kamien | Language: English | ISBN:
B006PKVSBY | Format: PDF
Music: An Appreciation, Brief Edition Description
What does it take to make a great performance? It takes great music, a great performer and a great instrument. Music: An Appreciation includes some of the greatest music ever created. Roger Kamien’s excellence as an interpreter of that music has made his program number one in the market used by over half a million students since its conception. Now, CONNECT Kamien provides the world-class instrument that allows Music: An Appreciation to bring great music to his audience in an extraordinary new way. Music: An Appreciation is great music, a great interpreter, and a great instrument.
- File Size: 70978 KB
- Print Length: 480 pages
- Simultaneous Device Usage: Up to 2 simultaneous devices, per publisher limits
- Publisher: Humanities & Social Science; 7 edition (July 6, 2010)
- Sold by: Amazon Digital Services, Inc.
- Language: English
- ASIN: B006PKVSBY
- Text-to-Speech: Not enabled
X-Ray for Textbooks:
- Lending: Not Enabled
- Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #84,064 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
- #9
in Kindle Store > Kindle eBooks > Arts & Photography > Music > Theory, Composition & Performance > Appreciation - #48
in Books > Arts & Photography > Music > Theory, Composition & Performance > Appreciation
- #9
in Kindle Store > Kindle eBooks > Arts & Photography > Music > Theory, Composition & Performance > Appreciation - #48
in Books > Arts & Photography > Music > Theory, Composition & Performance > Appreciation
This book purports to be a survey of music from the Middle Ages through the present; as such, it spends rather a lot of space covering music from 450 AD through 1900, and precious little attention on anything that could loosely be considered "modern". It also gives only a short chapter nod-of-the-head to non-western music, with a tiny subchapter on sub-Saharan Africa and a slightly longer subchapter on Indian Classical music and Ravi Shankar. It seems to me that if the desire was to write a text on "classical" music from pre-1900, it would have been better to simply do so and make no attempt to PRETEND to pay any attention to anything more recent, and leave the more recent music to another book entirely. (And yet another one for "Non-Western World Music".) By making vague hand-waving gestures at including recent and non-Western music but doing such a slipshod job of it, the author has seriously weakened his claim to accomplishing what he sets out to do.
To make matters worse, the editing in the book is atrocious for a seventh edition; one would hope that the majority of the careless errors in writing would have been caught by now. Granted, most of the errors occur in the parts of the book that deal with post-1900 music, so perhaps it's a sign that these sections simply weren't considered important enough to bother proofreading; we have such sloppy mistakes as (on page 318) "Bela Bartok...was born Hungary..." (rather than "born IN Hungary" -- I suspect the author was not suggesting that Bartok was born with an appetite, and even if he was, THAT was misspelled), or on page 324, "(George Gershwin's) parents were Russian-Jewish immigrant..." rather than "immigrants", or on 325, "...clarinet solo that stasrts...", or on 330, "His textures clear..." rather than "are clear", or on 334, "...
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