musical analysis online?

m501

New member
hi!

i have musical analysis as a subject in school, so it would be very, very helpful if there were compositions analysed on the net.
is there a library online that has clasical music analysed?

tnx in advence
 

Gringoire

New member
There is a virtual plethora of online journals and libraries devoted to scholarly research, analysis, and theory in the field of music, but I have cited some exceptional ones here.

\"Oxford Music Quarterly\":

The Musical Quarterly has long been cited as the premier scholarly musical journal in the United States. Over the years it has published the writings of many important composers and musicologists, including Aaron Copland, Arnold Schoenberg, Marc Blitzstein, Henry Cowell, and Camille Saint-Saens. The journal focuses on the merging areas in scholarship where much of the challenging new work in the study of music is being produced. Regular sections include \'American Musics\', \'Music and Culture\', \'The Twentieth Century\', and an \'Institutions, Industries, Technologies\' section which examines music and the ways it is created and consumed. In addition, a fifth section entitled \'Primary Sources\' features discussions on issues of biography, texts, and manuscripts; reflections on leading figures; personal statements by noted performers and composers; and essays on performances and recordings. Along with discussions of important new books, MQ publishes review essays on a wide variety of significant new music performances and recordings.

http://mq.oxfordjournals.org/

\"Music and Letters\":

Music and Letters is long established as the leading British journal of musical scholarship. Its coverage embraces all fields of musical enquiry, from the earliest times to the present day, and its authorship is international.

http://ml.oxfordjournals.org/

\"The Journal of Musicology\":

A fantastic site for music analysis. Everything from arias to symphonies is scrutinized. The Journal of Musicology offers an unparalleled journey into the world of musical scholarship. The journal furnishes comprehensive articles in music history, criticism, performance practice, and archival research. Each issue contains a selection of studies and occasional review essays representative of the full range of today\'s diverse approaches to the exploration of music. The Journal of Musicology is a sound forum for analysis in this still-expanding discipline, drawing a loyal readership from eminent scholars and musicians to performers and students.

http://www.journalofmusicology.org/

You can gain access to the journals that I have cited through the \"Scholarly Journal Archive\":

http://www.jstor.org/

You can learn more about participation information here:

http://www.jstor.org/about/participation.html
 
Last edited:

m501

New member
o, thank you very much for bothering to help me. :)

anyways, i'd so like to join, but where i live (Bosnia) no school has access to it, and i'm under age, so i don't own a credit card, so i can't join. :(

thanks, anyway :D
 

Contratrombone64

Admiral of Fugues
Musical analysis is fun. You just need to pick up a piano sonata of Haydn or Mozart, for example and see if you can put your lessons learned to the test. In most cases ( but not all ) Mozart and Haydn used sonata form. Briefly: 1) exposition (statement of the main theme(s), look out for repeat signs because this is often where the exposition ends 2) development (where the theme is developed and sometimes new ones introduced these developed ideas can be anything from repeating the main theme but in a different harmonic cloak or rhythm 3) recapitulation or coda where there's a summing up of ideas. Most Haydn/Mozart sonatas and symphonies are in Sonata Form.

William Lovelock wrote a fabulous book in form. I'll see if I can add more to this post, the above was off the top of my head. I remember having to study counterpoint and fugue, that was fun
 
Top