Singing Bronze: A History of Carillon Music
Autor Luc Romboutsen Limba Engleză Paperback – 16 iun 2014
The carillon, the world's largest musical instrument, originated in the sixteenth century when inhabitants of the Low Countries started to produce music on bells in church and city towers. Today, carillon music still fills the soundscape of cities in Belgium and the Netherlands. Since World War I, carillon music has become popular in the United States, where it adds a spiritual dimension to public parks and university campuses.
Singing Bronze opens up the fascinating world of the carillon to the reader. It tells the great stories of European and American carillon history: the quest for the perfect musical bell, the fate of carillons in times of revolt and war, the role of patrons such as John D. Rockefeller Jr. and Herbert Hoover in the development of American carillon culture, and the battle between singing bronze and carillon electronics. Richly illustrated with original photographs and etchings, Singing Bronze tells how people developed, played, and enjoyed bell music. With this book, a fascinating history that is yet little known is made available for a wide public.
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Specificații
ISBN-10: 905867956X
Pagini: 360
Dimensiuni: 168 x 229 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.66 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Leuven University Press
Cuprins
Introduction
PART 1 ¿ BELL CULTURES IN ANTIQUITY AND THE MIDDLE AGES
Chapter 1 ¿ The magic of old bells
A fruit with pith
A world of sounds
Made in China
Jingle Bells
Bellmen
Chapter 2 ¿ The time of God
The daily call to prayer
Europe of Bells
The appearance of the medieval bell
Church doctrine and popular belief
Tolling for political ends
Chapter 3 ¿ The time of man
A day in the city
Tolling for special events
New bell casting techniques
The bell-founder in action
Chapter 4 ¿ The bondage of time
Clocks in monasteries and cathedrals
Measuring time in the open air
The signal becomes music
PART 2 ¿ THE OLD CARILLON ART
Chapter 5 ¿ A new musical instrument
Making music with bells
The terms beiaard and carillon
Further development of the new musical instrument
The first founders of carillon bells
Chapter 6 ¿ Carillon music in a divided land
Why in the Low Countries?
Good and bad songs
Bells as commodity
The oldest carillon books
Chapter 7 ¿ Pure bells
A blind nobleman with a keen sense of hearing
François Hemony
The Hemonys¿ secret
Pieter Hemony
The Hemony legacy
Chapter 8 ¿ Carillon music at the court
The successors of the Hemonys
The carillons of Peter the Great
Carillons for the young Prussians
Royal extravagance in Portugal
Chapter 9 ¿ The Bach of the carillon
Peter Vanden Gheyn, monk and entrepreneur
Matthias Vanden Gheyn, virtuoso carillonneur
Andreas Jozef Vanden Gheyn, talented bell-founder
The descendants of the Vanden Gheyns
Chapter 10 ¿ Panorama of the old carillon art
The bells
The automatic mechanism
Manual playing
The carillonneurs
The carillon repertoire
The audience
The fate of the French Low Countries
PART 3 ¿ THE NEW CARILLON ART
Chapter 11 ¿ National Carillon
Carillon music riding the waves of politics
The confiscation of bells in the Southern Low Countries
Gradual restoration of the bell stock
The Northern Republic in the French era
Napoleon¿s bell
Chapter 12 ¿ The carillon as romantic symbol
The carillon, an old instrument
Literary interest in bells and carillons
The carillon at the service of nationalism
Chapter 13 ¿ In search of the sound of the past
Bell-founding in the 19th century
Innovations in keyboard construction
Rediscovery of the art of bell tuning
Chapter 14 ¿ A soul in peace, among the stars
A carillonneur with an interest in technique
Enchanting Monday evenings
The vision of the master
An American much interested in carillons
Chapter 15 ¿ The broken bells of Flanders
War rages over Belgium
The voice of fallen carillons
Carillon war in the Netherlands
Bells of victory
Chapter 16 ¿ Memorial bells
A school for carillonneurs
Carillon sounds across the Atlantic
Rockefeller and his Belgian carillonneurs
The race for bigger and heavier
Contours of a new carillon culture
New carillons in other parts of the world
Chapter 17 ¿ New carillon construction in the Old Country
Belgian and English influence in the Netherlands
Protectionist reflexes in Belgium
Malaise among the Belgian bell-founders
Belgian carillons in the United States
The Mechelen carillon school during the interwar period
Chapter 18 ¿ `The bells fight with us¿
Nazi bells
Carillon music in occupied territory
The confiscation of bells in Europe
Liberation
Chapter 19 ¿ Dutch manufacture versus Carillon Americana
The return of the bells
Reconstruction in the Low Countries
A carillon without bells
Carillon battle in the Vatican pavilion
Chapter 20 ¿ Innovations in the Old and the New World
American Beauty
The American carillon movement
Acid rain in Europe
Using the computer
Carillon music in the East
Chapter 21 ¿ Panorama of the new carillon art
The carillons of the world
Carillon organizations
Carillonneurs and their audience
The diversity of carillon music
A future for the carillon
Sources and acknowledgements
Notes
Bibliography
Origin of the illustrations
Indices