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E-grāmata: Perspectives on Early Keyboard Music and Revival in the Twentieth Century

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The twentieth-century revival of early music unfolded in two successive movements rooted respectively in nineteenth-century antiquarianism and in rediscovery of the value of original instruments. The present volume is a collection of insights reflecting the principal concerns of the second of those revivals, focusing on early keyboards, and beginning in the 1950s. The volume and its authors acknowledge Canadian harpsichordist Kenneth Gilbert (b. 1931) as one of this revival’s leaders. The content reflects international research on early keyboard music, sources, instruments, theory, editing, and discography. Considerations that echo throughout the book are the problematics of source attributions, progressive institutionalization of early music, historical instruments as agents of artistic change and education, antecedents and networks of the revival seen as a social phenomenon, the impact of historical performance and the quest for understanding style and genre. The chapters cover historical performance practice, source studies, edition, theory and form, and instrument curating and building. Among their authors are prominent figures in performance, music history, editing, instrument building and restoration, and theory, some of whom engaged with the early keyboard revival as it was happening.

Figures
ix
Tables
x
Musical examples xi
Appendices xiii
Foreword xiv
John Grew
Prefatory remarks xviii
Alexander Silbiger
Acknowledgments xxiii
Notes on contributors xxiv
Manuscript sigla and abbreviations xxvii
Bibliographic abbreviations xxviii
Introduction 1(6)
Rachelle Taylor
1 Four decades after French Harpsichord Music of the Seventeenth Century: newly discovered sources
7(39)
Bruce Gustafson
2 The harpsichord class at the Paris Conservatoire: an administrative history
46(15)
Olivier Baumont
3 The organ of the German Church in Stockholm: to Overtornea and Hietaniemi and back again
61(13)
Hans-Ola Ericsson
Lena Weman
4 The saga of the 1753 organ of the Cathedral of Quebec: its installation, destruction, and rebirth
74(12)
Elisabeth Gallat-Morin
5 The challenges of caring for a playing collection
86(12)
Mimi S. Waitzman
6 Hubert Bedard (1933--89): a visionary of the early keyboard movement
98(25)
Rachelle Taylor
7 Some examples of transformative imitation in late seventeenth-century French organ music
123(12)
David Ponsford
8 The thirteen non-liturgical fugues a 4 in Le Livre d'orgue de Montreal
135(27)
Walter Kurt Kreyszig
9 Frescobaldi's contrapuntal "audacities": structures, processes, and affetti in keyboard Fantasia IX
162(11)
Massimiliano Guido
10 Chambonnieres's Pieces de claveßin of 1670 and the preservation of a performing style
173(15)
Ronald Broude
11 The new Frescobaldi edition
188(11)
Christopher Stembridge
12 The soloist, secondapratica, and the madrigal as a template for the new toccata
199(31)
Hank Knox
Rachelle Taylor
13 Kenneth Gilbert's recording legacy
230(41)
Antonio Lechasseur
Appendix: Kenneth Gilbert: a comprehensive bibliography 271(4)
Jacob Sagrans
Bibliography 275(18)
Index 293
Rachelle Taylor leads an international performing career and has recorded several albums of late Renaissance keyboard music. She is Adjunct Professor of Performance at McGill University and a music historian and archivist at Library and Archives Canada. Her research has been published in Belgium, Canada and the United Kingdom. She is co-editor of Networks of Music and Culture in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries (2013).









Hank Knox is hailed internationally for his "colorful, kinetic performances" (All Music Guide) which "abound in vitality" (Early Music America), and performs around the globe. He studied harpsichord with Kenneth Gilbert and is a founding member of Montreals Arion Baroque Orchestra. He is professor of harpsichord and continuo at the Schulich School of Music of McGill University. He was awarded the Thomas Binkley prize for an outstanding university collegium director by Early Music America in 2008.