Unit name | Cycles and Fragments: Lied and melodie in the Long Nineteenth Century |
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Unit code | MUSI20083 |
Credit points | 20 |
Level of study | I/5 |
Teaching block(s) |
Teaching Block 1 (weeks 1 - 12) |
Unit director | Professor. Ellis |
Open unit status | Not open |
Pre-requisites |
None |
Co-requisites |
None |
School/department | Department of Music |
Faculty | Faculty of Arts |
Description With a focus on German and French song cycles, this unit considers Romantic and post-Romantic song in terms of its contribution to the aesthetics of Romanticism, the song cycle’s instability as a genre, its relationship to its poetry, piano v. orchestral accompaniment, stylistic change across the century, performance contexts and performative gestures, social utility and appropriation into nationalist discourse. The emphasis is as much on the cultural work of song and song cycle as on the music/text nature of the compositions themselves. Selected works from Schubert to Fauré are placed in socio-cultural context (Biedermeier, Symbolist, Vienna, Paris), while modern scholarly perspectives will come from bibliography in literature and modern languages as well as from musicology.
This unit’s aims are: This unit’s aims are: 1) to survey the changing forms of a historiographically problematic repertory across a wide time-span of around a century; 2) to set that repertory in its various artistic and aesthetic contexts; 3) to allow students to engage with critical scholarship including from disciplines lying beyond musicology; 4) to develop students’ skills in critical listening; 5) to develop students’ skills in the oral and written presentation of their ideas.
At the end of the course, students should:
Weekly 2 hour seminars for the whole cohort
All the assessment is summative: 1x2500-word essay (50%); 1x 2-hour exam (50%). Both the essay and the exam will demonstrate (1) and (2) with the essay in particular providing an opportunity for the students to demonstrate (3) and (4)
Bergeron, Katherine, Voice Lessons: French Mélodie in the Belle Epoque (New York: Oxford University Press, 2010) Cave, Terence, Mignon’s Afterlives: Crossing Cultures from Goethe to the Twenty-First Century (Oxford University Press, 2011) Kramer, Richard A., Distant Cycles: Schubert and the Conceiving of Song (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1994) Tunbridge, Laura, The Song Cycle (Cambridge University Press, 2010) Tunley, David, Salons, Singers, and Songs: a Background to Romantic French Song, 1830-1870 (Farnham: Ashgate, 2002) Youens, Susan, Heinrich Heine and the Lied Cambridge University Press, 2007)