ABSTRACT

In his 1985 book The Idea of Music: Schoenberg and Others, Peter Franklin set out a challenge for musicology: namely, how best to talk and write about the music of modern European culture that fell outside of the modernist mainstream typified by Schoenberg, Berg, and Webern? Thirty years on, this collected volume of essays by Franklin’s students and colleagues returns to that challenge and the vibrant intellectual field that has since developed. Moving freely between insights into opera, Volksoper, film, festival, and choral movement, and from the very earliest years of the twentieth century up to the 1980s, its authors listen with a ‘critical ear’: they site these musical phenomena within a wider web of modern cultural practices - a perspective, in turn, that enables them to exercise a disciplinary self-awareness after Franklin’s manner.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

section I|14 pages

Personal tributes

chapter 2|5 pages

From opera house to cinema

Forging a new discipline in 1988

section II|64 pages

Modernism and modernity

chapter 4|24 pages

Korngold’s Violanta

Venice, carnival, and the masking of identities

section III|74 pages

Reconsidering interwar Germany

chapter 6|22 pages

‘Ein Menschenherz geopfert – oder viele!’

Hans Pfitzner and the idea of a Volksoper

chapter 7|26 pages

The architecture of trauma

Richard Strauss, Salzburg, and the Great War

chapter 8|26 pages

Cozarinsky’s La Guerre d’un seul homme and musical categories

(Re)-framing Pfitzner, Strauss, Schreker, and Schoenberg cinematically

section IV|99 pages

Musicology and its values

chapter 9|30 pages

‘Britten Minor’

Constructing the modernist canon

chapter 10|32 pages

Elgar’s part-song cycle, Op. 53

Idealism and education

chapter 11|18 pages

‘It must be done fresh and new’

Bernard Herrmann’s score for North by Northwest

chapter 12|19 pages

Back from the dead

Kubrick, music, and the auteur