This volume revisits the artificial and enormously limiting historiographical concepts of centre and periphery in European musical life throughout the long 19th century and until the outbreak of the First World War. In this period, music played a prominent role, and cities such as Paris, Vienna, Milan or London, real laboratories of artistic creation, became social and cultural references for the rest of the continent, whose inhabitants strove to imitate their musical habits such as concert and theatrical life, soirées, parties or musical promenades. From diverse perspectives, this volume rethinks the singularity, influence and connections of different European musical centres, analysing the reproduction of cultural models and the conflicts that these models imposed on the peripheries, most of which have been ignored in the historiography of Western European music. In addition, it will also address the birth of musico-national languages situated on the European geographical margins, that develop interesting synergies between universality and nationality. The peripheral models of musical production and circulation in contexts far from the usual musical venues will also be addressed, as well as the derived cultural transfers.
Paris – Vienne, 1890-1914: singularités et convergences musicales
págs. 3-20
págs. 21-36
«Periphery» as Centre: Canon Formation and Arrangements of Public Music in the Early Nineteenth-Century Viennese Home
págs. 37-50
Viennese Operetta Composers and their Publishers: A Love-Hate Relationship?
págs. 51-66
Music for the ‘Nation’: the Creation of a Transnational Musical Style between Paris and Republican Milan
págs. 67-87
págs. 91-128
For the ‘Authentic’ National and Aesthetic Values: the challenges of Music Production and Performance in the Kingdom of Serbia
págs. 129-152
Music in and from Ireland: Perspectives on an Ununited Kingdom
págs. 153-167
Centre and Periphery: Symphonic Identity in Portugal
págs. 169-180
Form as a Relational Object: Two Stories of Metrical Dissonances, or a Music-Historiographical Lesson from George Enescu Circulation of Music in Different Contexts
págs. 181-206
Le «Couronnement de la Muse du Peuple» de Gustave Charpentier: un théâtre citoyen à la rencontre des provinces françaises (1897-1914)
págs. 209-228
Roma, Magyar, Jew: Complexities of Cultural Identity in the Spread of «Gypsy Music» in the Long Nineteenth Century
págs. 229-243
Peripheries in Dialogue: Grasping the Sounds of «L’Espagne Romantique» in the Nineteenth Century
págs. 245-281
From Paris to the Ottoman Empire: Spanish Estudiantinas, the Popular Music Stage and Sonorities of the Belle Époque
págs. 283-298
Quinito Valverde: transculturalidad y modernidad en su obra europea (1907-1913)
págs. 299-320
On the Edges of Society: The Hidden Musical Cultures of Nineteenth-century British Lunatic Asylums
págs. 323-342
Singing la Patrie in Parisian Cafés: The «chanteuses patriotiques» (1870- 1889)
págs. 343-362
Between Hungary and Spain: Musical Encounters behind Europe
Gloria Araceli Rodríguez Lorenzo, Francisco J. Giménez Rodríguez
págs. 363-383
págs. 385-407
© 2001-2025 Fundación Dialnet · Todos los derechos reservados