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$14.13
61. People From Montbrison, Loire:
 
62. Musikalisches Hoeren serieller
 
$125.41
63. Wege zum musikalischen Strukturalismus:
 
$9.95
64. Passing through the Screen: Pierre
$14.13
65. Compositions by Pierre Boulez:
$31.98
66. Penser la musique aujourd'hui
 
67. Boulez in Bayreuth.The Centenary
 
$32.95
68. Incises: Pour Piano (Version 2001)
 
69. Boulez In Bayreuth
 
70. Boulez In Bayreuth: Der Jahrhundert-ring,
 
71. Boulez In Bayreuth: Der Jahrhundert-ring,
 
72. Boulez in Bayreuth the Century
$0.97
73. To Boulez and Beyond: Music in
 
74. Notes of an Apprenticeship
 
75. NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC STAGEBILL
 
76. Par Volont? Et Par Hasard. Entretiens
 
77. Structures, Premier Livre
 
78. KLAUS TENNSTEDT COND. / MIRIAM
 
79. October 65
 
80. Le Soleil des eaux. Deux poe

61. People From Montbrison, Loire: Pierre Boulez, Marie-Anne Pierrette Paulze, Victor de Laprade, Yves Triantafyllos, Antoine Du Verdier
Paperback: 36 Pages (2010-09-15)
list price: US$14.14 -- used & new: US$14.13
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Asin: 1156329523
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Chapters: Pierre Boulez, Marie-Anne Pierrette Paulze, Victor de Laprade, Yves Triantafyllos, Antoine Du Verdier, Philippe Delaye, Jean-François Chossy. Source: Wikipedia. Pages: 35. Not illustrated. Free updates online. Purchase includes a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Excerpt: Pierre Boulez (French pronunciation: ) (born March 26, 1925) is a French composer of contemporary classical music and a conductor. Boulez was born in Montbrison, Loire, France. As a child he began piano lessons and demonstrated aptitude in both music and mathematics. He pursued the latter at Lyon before pursuing music at the Paris Conservatoire under Olivier Messiaen and the wife of Arthur Honegger, Andrée Vaurabourg. It was through Messiaen that he discovered twelve-tone technique which he would later study privately with René Leibowitz and went on to write atonal music in a post-Webernian serial style. Boulez was initially part of a cadre of early supporters of Leibowitz, but due to an altercation with Leibowitz, their relations turned divisive, as Boulez spent much of his career promoting the music of Messiaen instead. The first fruits of this were his cantatas Le visage nuptial and Le soleil des eaux for female voices and orchestra, both composed in the late 1940s and revised several times since, as well as the Second Piano Sonata of 1948, a well-received 32-minute work that Boulez composed at the age of 23. Thereafter, Boulez was influenced by Messiaen's research to extend twelve-tone technique beyond the realm of pitch organization, serialising durations, dynamics, mode of attack, and so on. This technique became known as integral serialism. Boulez quickly became one of the philosophical leaders of the post-war movement in the arts towards greater abstraction and experimentation. Many composers of Boulez's generation taught at the Internationale Ferienkurse f...More: http://booksllc.net/?id=66592 ... Read more


62. Musikalisches Hoeren serieller Musik Untersuchungen am Beispiel von Pierre Boulez''" Le Marteau sans maitre"
by Ulrich. MOSCH
 Hardcover: Pages (2004)

Asin: B0047X60XC
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63. Wege zum musikalischen Strukturalismus: René Leibowitz, Pierre Boulez, John Cage und die Webern-Rezeption in Paris um 1950
by Inge Kovács
 Paperback: 296 Pages (2004)
-- used & new: US$125.41
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Asin: 3931264106
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64. Passing through the Screen: Pierre Boulez and Michel Foucault (1).(Critical essay): An article from: Journal of Literary Studies
by Mary Rorich
 Digital: Pages (2006-12-01)
list price: US$9.95 -- used & new: US$9.95
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Asin: B000UC26YQ
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Product Description
This digital document is an article from Journal of Literary Studies, published by Thomson Gale on December 1, 2006. The length of the article is 11856 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: Passing through the Screen: Pierre Boulez and Michel Foucault (1).(Critical essay)
Author: Mary Rorich
Publication: Journal of Literary Studies (Magazine/Journal)
Date: December 1, 2006
Publisher: Thomson Gale
Volume: 22Issue: 3-4Page: 296(28)

Article Type: Critical essay

Distributed by Thomson Gale ... Read more


65. Compositions by Pierre Boulez: Le Marteau Sans Maître
Paperback: 40 Pages (2010-05-31)
list price: US$14.14 -- used & new: US$14.13
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Asin: 1156213061
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Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Excerpt: Le marteau sans maître (The hammer without a master) is a composition by the French composer Pierre Boulez. It is a setting of the surrealist poetry of René Char for alto and six instrumentalists. It was first performed in 1955. The work has nine movements, four of which set the text of three poems of René Char. The remaining movements are instrumental extrapolations of the other four: Before Le Marteau, Boulez had established a reputation as the composer of modernist, and serialist works such as Structures I, and Polyphonie X, as well as his infamously "unplayable" Second Piano Sonata (Jameux 1989b, 21). Le Marteau was first written as a six-movement composition between 1953 and 1954, and was published in that form in the latter year, "imprimée pour le festival de musique, 1954, Donaueschingen" (though in the end it was not performed there) in a photographic reproduction of the composer's manuscript by Universal Edition, given the catalog number UE 12362. In 1955, Boulez revised the order of these movements, and interpolated three newly composed ones (Mosch 2004, 4445). The original, six-movement form lacked the two "Bel édifice" settings and the third commentaire on "Bourreaux de solitude". In addition, the movements were grouped in two closed cycles: first the three "Artisanat furieux" movements, then the three "Bourreaux de solitude" ones, otherwise in the order of the final score. The first movement, though fundamentally the same composition, was originally scored as a duet for vibraphone and guitarthe flute and viola were added only in the revisionand numerous less significant alterations were made to playing techniques and notation in the other movements (Siegele 1979, 89). It received its première in 1955 at the 29th Festival of the ... More: http://booksllc.net/?id=6324602 ... Read more


66. Penser la musique aujourd'hui
by Pierre Boulez
Mass Market Paperback: 167 Pages (1987-11-30)
-- used & new: US$31.98
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Asin: 2070709019
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67. Boulez in Bayreuth.The Centenary Ring
by Patrice Chereau Pierre Boulez
 Hardcover: Pages (1981)

Asin: B000KRQORQ
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68. Incises: Pour Piano (Version 2001)
by Pierre Boulez
 Hardcover: 24 Pages (2002-01)
-- used & new: US$32.95
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Asin: 3702411860
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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Customer Reviews (1)

5-0 out of 5 stars cutting piano timbre =incisions= of timbre
This was originally written in 1994 as a showpiece for piano competitions,an obligatory item to be learned by the participants. It is late Boulez, the more accessible period where dimensions of surface seem to have interested him yet not in a simplistic way.Many draw the same breath of this "Incises" with the youthful(quite widely played) "12 Notations" for piano solo,but those earlier shibboleths were quite naive little piano textures,violent and brutal,yet obvious and predictable,well they were student creations revealing an interest in modernity. "Incises" for piano solo here however was destined for larger habitations as the "12 Notations" (that found themselves metamorphosized into brilliant orchestral etudes.Boulez seems to have takened a deep interest late in life in the music materials as objects where the creator then through some functional plan can work where the music can go by themselves templates shapes, forms "readymades" I guess we can call them,something already in the world;very post-modern inorientation."Incises" here found a resting place in the much more ambitious prize winning "Sur Incises" for Three Pianos, Three Harps, and Three Tuned Percussion instruments. Curious how "Sur Incises" still maintains its "etude" dimension" not really setting itself into an "Other" trajectory. But I like to consider "Incises" the piano solo and its revision in 2001 as a totally isolated piece absorbed in its own pathways, and places for piano timbre."Incises" the term refers to "cutting",not the way people of all expressive lifeworld modes today cut themselves (as a signifier for -feeling- [real]), but more a function of time and [nature], the way the inevitable flow of water for example ;cuts; itself into a river as it slowly descends down a continent,how channels :cuts: through sediment, or more lapidarian how a steel needle might
=cut= a metal plate. Boulez's creativity has searched at times for process, how a concept might come to define and direct the way the music and its materials proceeds and envelopes itself in durational shapes,time and lengths. We could even speak of Piaget's theories on how children experience time, to find where Boulez's quite obvious piano solo here finds itself,its function. The piece has many repeated tones,very virtuosic,very direct,no mysteries; it plays itself to the grandstands.The "cutting" is in the way lines interrupt,intermingle, glide,roll,turn,bend,shape override and juxtapose themselves/itselves onto each other"cutting" themselves within the texture of the musical proceedings. Marilyn Nonken plays the hell out of this piece, if you have ever heard her Boulez, Winston Choi as well. ... Read more


69. Boulez In Bayreuth
by Pierre Boulez
 Hardcover: Pages (1981)

Asin: B000WSSBP6
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70. Boulez In Bayreuth: Der Jahrhundert-ring, The Centenary Ring, Le Ring'du Centena
by PIERRE. BOULEZ
 Hardcover: Pages (1981)

Asin: B001KRVUFG
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71. Boulez In Bayreuth: Der Jahrhundert-ring, The Centenary Ring, Le Ring'du Centena
by PIERRE. BOULEZ
 Hardcover: Pages (1981)

Asin: B001KRVUFG
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72. Boulez in Bayreuth the Century Ring
by Pierre; Chereau, Patrice; Peduzzi, Richard Boulez
 Hardcover: Pages (1981-01-01)

Asin: B00416KDEW
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73. To Boulez and Beyond: Music in Europe Since the Rite of Spring
by Joan Peyser, Joan
Hardcover: 400 Pages (1999-10-01)
list price: US$24.95 -- used & new: US$0.97
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Asin: 0823078752
Average Customer Review: 2.0 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Beginning with Stravinsky and "The Rite of Spring," this book traces the course of classical music from the early twentieth century to the present day and beyond, as it moves into the twenty-first century. This elucidating text covers the major figures in music of the past hundred years, from Schoenberg, Stravinsky, Varese, and Webern to Boulez, Cage, Henze, and Stockhausen. Describing a dramatic revolution against music traditional and a new artistic sensibility, this book offers a guided tour and a concise analysis of the major trends in classical music. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (5)

2-0 out of 5 stars The most deceptively titled work I've come across in a while
Joan Peyser's book TO BOULEZ AND BEYOND: Music in Europe Since the Rite of Spring has a rather deceptive title. I assumed that it would be an overview of contemporary music, profiling various composers. Instead, Peyser's book is divided into two halves. The first is a history of the work of Stravinsky and of the Second Viennese School, exploring how they each contributed to European music. The second half is a gushing (but that's okay, I admire him myself) biography of Boulez alone, that only goes to the 1970s in significant detail and has only a few anecdotes from the 1980s and 1990s. These two parts are entirely incongruous, and as other reviewers have commented, this is a freakish abortion of a work that inexplicably got published. There is a brief and unsubstantial foreward by Charles Wuorinen that relates only to the first half; I suspect he had no idea what sort of book he was contributing to.

About the only thing I found worthwhile about the book are the many stories about Boulez's rocky tenure in New York. Many biographies of Boulez mention that he faced challenges and angered people, but don't go into significant detail. Here there is all kinds of juicy detail that Boulez fans will enjoy.

Otherwise, the work is poor. There is no real musicological analysis here, it's all simple historical writing. The typesetting is poor and the entire enterprise has a self-published feel about it.

1-0 out of 5 stars A messy book about Joan Peyser
It is very hard to believe that a book as defective as this is thrown onto the market as a glossy hardcover with one of the most misleading titles ever. "Never ... use the word gossip in a pejorative sense. It's the very stuff of biography and has to be woven in," Peyser once told her students at NYU. And so what you get here is essentially an extended tabloid gossip-column, full of unsubstantiated hear-say and personal opinions, including that of Peyser's beautician (I'm not joking!). There is no discernable structure, logical order or clear argument. Solid research isn't Peyser's concern either; one gets the impression that her only source is the New York Times. Even keeping track of the consistency in her own writing appears too much to ask. Just compare pages 123 and 126. On page 123, admiring words from Christian Science Monitor writer Winthrop Tyron are quoted with regard to Varèse's Ameriques. What a surpise then, to find the exact same quotation three pages later, but this time in praise of Intégrales! Apparently, BOTH were "the first original score for grand orchestra that has been made in America since the twentieth century began" - a qualification that is suprising indeed for Intégrales, which is scored for 11 winds and 4 percussion... Obviously, attempts at high-flying statements on the progress of musical history fall completely flat in such a context. Peyser's credentials as a qualified musico-historian all but evaporate as early as page 10, where she calls Vienna the birthplace of Beethoven, Haydn, Schubert and Mozart: wrong three out of four times. Or later, when she says that Berlioz's Requiem depends on "huge masses of sound", a claim that can only be upheld by one who has never heard the piece (which, though it requires large forces, is very quiet almost all through). Or even, and more to the point, in the first sentence on page 1: "It was an inevitability that tonality would outlive its role as the foundation on which serious music was based."

Only 350 pages later it turns out that Peyser did not completely fail to notice the minor role that serialism, aleatory and other such inventions played on the overall musical stage of the twentieth century. They formed a very particular niche that contains much that is all but obsolete nowadays, if not downright absurd. (I laughed out loud reading about pianist Tudor, who was deeply shocked to find rhythmic values notated in a piece by Stockhausen. He "frantically tried to get out of the four walls that the piece represented to [him]." Fortunately for Tudor, Cage wrote his 4'33" to counter exactly this problem). The vast majority of composers, thank god, are today (and have always been) working on the assumption that music should speak to ear and to the heart, not merely to the mind. Even the greatest works of the serialist age, like Le Marteau sans Maitre, or Moses und Aaron, remain the rarest of occurences on stage as well as on disc. This hasn't changed in the past 50 years, and isn't likely to in the next 50. It takes frightening doses of narcissism to maintain, as many avant-gardists did and do, that this is due to the stupidity of 'bourgeois' audiences, and not the fault of the music itself. Peyser admits as much when she cites evidence from neurophysiology to explain the limited appeal of serialist music. She fails to notice that these observations refute her opening claim. In general, her book would have considerably gained in interest if she had delved deeper into the complex nature/nurture debate and research regarding music perception, and had related them to the activities of the 20th century avant garde.

Unfortunately, she is content to limit herself to a very selective, sketchy and random overview of musical developments in Europe in the first half of the twentieth century, with Schoenberg and Stravinksy at its core and Webern and Varèse tacked on for good measure. All this, we eventually find, merely serves as a prelude to part 2 of the book: a move to the US, and a portrait of Boulez, who emerges alternately as a supreme musical genius and a robotic kind of unfeeling freak. Peyser clearly is a close personal acquaintance of Boulez (or was, at least; I doubt she is among Boulez's favourites after he read the book); later on we also meet Charles Wuorinen, who wrote the foreword to this book, and who can be seen with his arm around Peyser on the back flap. A niggling suspicion arises that there is a correlation between being a musical greatness in Peyser's universe and being one of her friends. As if to counter this impression, she is quick to list all the prizes these people have won, including in Wuorinen`s case a "MacArthur ('genius') scholarship" (note the (ahum) subtle insertion of the word genius). Clearly, Peyser is happily ignorant of all those composers of the past who won numerous prizes and accolades in their own time and are now completely forgotten. And the gossip continues, of course, including ample examples of the silly feuds the avant-garde engaged in (should music be determined by mathematical tables or by a throw of dice? and other such existential dilemma's...). If Peyser is in need of an explanation of Boulez's style and lacks the information to give it, she doesn't hesitate to throw Freud at him. Actually, she throws anything at him but the kitchen sink. She is thoroughly miffed by his refusal to reveal the intimate details of his personal life, and quick to turn this against him. Eventually, the analysis of his work culminates in that one crucial musical question: "does he have sex?" (Yes, that is a quote!).
Yet after 360 pages we still have no grasp of the essentials of his music as such, and barely any of its effect on the wider musical scene (which is far from equivalent to the admiration of a few young composers whom Peyser interviewed and who happened to be pupils of... Wuorinen). True to herself, Peyser prefers to spend a full page on her eyewitness account of a rehearsel in which Boulez brought a flutist to tears with his insistent perfectionism, and to quote at length from her own newspaper writings. Boulez the conductor, not the composer, takes center stage, no doubt because the public function of a conductor comes with rather more ready-to-serve items of juicy gossip (and I do most heartily use that word in a pejorative sense!). But the main problem is that the "I"-factor in this book is so strong that one is left wondering if Peyser herself isn't its main character.
In short, a thoroughly inadequate and vaguely repulsive book that has quite deservedly gone out of print.

1-0 out of 5 stars credibility?
As a non-expert reader seeking an introduction in the field, I "learn" on the first couple of pages about a list of composers - Beethoven among them - being born in Vienna. How much is the reader to believe of the information he doesn't already know better by himself?

4-0 out of 5 stars Essential and Lucid
This work is the combined result of two previous books by Peyser, the first a study of Schoenberg, Stravinsky and Varese; the second a biography of Pierre Boulez up to the mid-seventies. Although Peyser has edited her work to eliminate some overlapping material, and has added a short chapter on Boulez' last three decades, there is still a feeling of jerry-rigging and overall incompleteness that cannot be avoided, and one is left craving for more material on Boulez' latter life and composers from the late seventies on.

No matter. These flaws pale in comparison to the value of the work itself -- a lucid, emphatic, and highly readable account of modernism in music. Avoiding serious technical discussion that would alienate anyone but a composer, Peyser casts her subjects in a dramatic light, detailing their works in terms of impact, emotional content, and the challenges they either met or failed to overcome. Of course special attention is paid to Boulez, who emerges as a complex, thorny, enigmatic and passionate figure -- very much like his music, in fact. As Boulez is notoriously private, her objective and highly researched biography is doubly valuable, and some of the anecdotes are simply priceless.

Highly recommended to any enthusiast of modern atonal or experimental music.

3-0 out of 5 stars Boulez Updated
In contrast to a previous reviewer, I found this volume interesting and well worth reading, if hardly up to its subtitle of Music in Europe Since the Rite of Spring.I think what happened was that Peyser intended to update her Boulez biography of 1975 (she says as much), had already started a book about music since the Rite, and finally gave up and combined the two in an unfortunate mishmash, adding bits and pieces of scattered information about other composers as it seemed appropriate to her.It is, however, simply untrue to say that Peyser makes Boulez out to be a saint. That she seems to have some personal feelings for him does not detract from her biography or its assessment of his music, which is certainly not always positive. That she would at least like to have a bias in Boulez's favor I wouldn't deny.Peyser's book does bring Boulez--an infamously private man--to life, and does actually help in approaching his music, whatever the flaws of the book may be.It would be a great buy in paperback.Do not look for any technical information, however:while not a Boulez expert, I might recommend Peter Stacey's Boulez and the Modern Concept as an approach for those familiar with some music theory. ... Read more


74. Notes of an Apprenticeship
by Pierre; Weinstock, Herbert (translated by) Boulez
 Hardcover: Pages (1968-01-01)

Asin: B001O6P39M
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75. NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC STAGEBILL - DECEMBER, 1977
by PIERRE (CONDUCTOR) GARRICK OHLSSON, PIANIST BOULEZ
 Paperback: Pages (1977)

Asin: B003YF2SJY
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76. Par Volont? Et Par Hasard. Entretiens Avec C?lestin
by Pierre Deli?ge. Boulez
 Paperback: Pages (1975-01-01)

Asin: B002EEV59U
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77. Structures, Premier Livre
by Pierre Boulez
 Paperback: Pages (1955-01-01)

Asin: B003JW8QCA
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78. KLAUS TENNSTEDT COND. / MIRIAM FRIED, VIOLINIST - NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC STAGEBILL - OCTOBER, 1998
by PIERRE (DIRECTOR) BOULEZ
 Paperback: Pages (1998)

Asin: B003YF2U3I
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79. October 65
by Laura Mulvey, Johanne Lamoureux, Silvia Kolbowski, Pierre Boulez, John Cage, Francois Rouan
 Paperback: 132 Pages (1993)

Isbn: 0262752158
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80. Le Soleil des eaux. Deux poe
by Pierre Boulez
 Unknown Binding: 55 Pages (1968)

Asin: B0000CTIM8
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