Classical Music in a Changing Culture
Essays from The American Record Guide- Authors:
- Publisher:
- 2014
Summary
Founded in 1935, The American Record Guide is America's oldest classical music review magazine. In 1987, when Donald Vroon assumed its editorship, he took on the Herculean task of writing editorials on a vast array of subjects, amassing a wealth of commentary and criticism on not only the foibles and failings, but glimmers of light in American culture. A staunch defender of the highbrow pleasures of good music composed, played, and heard with intelligence, Vroon takes no prisoners in assessing the challenges and failures and possible successes that confront America’s future as a nation of music listeners.
In Classical Music in a Changing Culture: Essays from The American Record Guide, Vroon delves into a variety of topics: orchestra finances, contemporary music, classical music marketing, attracting young crowds, musical aesthetics, the future of classical music, the sale and distribution of music in the modern era; the decline of American culture and its causes; the role of misguided ideologies that affect American music, from political correctness to multiculturalism to period performance practice, and the true richness of our music and its subculture. As Vroon argues, since all criticism is cultural criticism, music criticism in the broadest sense—from its composition to its distribution to its reception—is a window onto broader culture issues.
Classical Music in a Changing Culture should appeal to anyone serious about classical music and worried about its increasing marginalization in our contemporary culture. These essays are not written for specialists but for thinking readers who love music and care about its place in our lives.
Search publication
Bibliographic data
- Copyright year
- 2014
- ISBN-Print
- 978-1-4422-3454-3
- ISBN-Online
- 978-1-4422-3455-0
- Publisher
- Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham
- Language
- English
- Pages
- 225
- Product type
- Book Titles
Table of contents
- Contents No access
- Introduction No access
- Elitism No access Pages 1 - 6
- Education and Culture No access Pages 7 - 10
- Don’t Educate Us; Entertain Us No access Pages 11 - 14
- Fun No access Pages 15 - 18
- Fads and Trends No access Pages 19 - 24
- The Romantic Art No access Pages 25 - 32
- Orchestra Finances No access Pages 33 - 38
- The New and News No access Pages 39 - 50
- Contemporary Music No access Pages 51 - 52
- Airheads No access Pages 53 - 56
- Marketing and Image No access Pages 57 - 62
- Marketing Idiocy No access Pages 63 - 64
- Marketing and Its Discontents No access Pages 65 - 74
- Seeking Out the Best Things in Life No access Pages 75 - 78
- Multiculturalism No access Pages 79 - 82
- Later: Black Musicians and Marketing No access Pages 83 - 84
- Attracting a Young Crowd No access Pages 85 - 90
- Classical, Rock, and Youth No access Pages 91 - 96
- The Land of the Obvious No access Pages 97 - 102
- On Spiritual Matters No access Pages 103 - 110
- Attentiveness and Judgment No access Pages 111 - 118
- Attentiveness II No access Pages 119 - 124
- Absorption No access Pages 125 - 128
- Feeling No access Pages 129 - 136
- Does Quality Have a Future? No access Pages 137 - 144
- Performance Practice No access Pages 145 - 150
- Aesthetics and Criticism No access Pages 151 - 152
- PPP and True Authenticity No access Pages 153 - 162
- PPP II No access Pages 163 - 168
- Cultural Suicide No access Pages 169 - 172
- Cultural Suicide II No access Pages 173 - 178
- The Golden Age No access Pages 179 - 182
- The Nostalgia Trap No access Pages 183 - 188
- Surtitles No access Pages 189 - 192
- The Death of Service No access Pages 193 - 202
- Distribution No access Pages 203 - 210
- Browsing No access Pages 211 - 212
- Is the Internet the End of Records? No access Pages 213 - 222
- Index No access Pages 223 - 224
- About the Author No access Pages 225 - 225





