Instrumental Music and the Industrial Revolution

International Conference

1-3 July 2006 - Cremona, Biblioteca Statale - Sala Puerari (Museo Civico 'Ala Ponzone')

 

in collaboration with Ad Parnassum Journal, Fondazione-Stichting P.A. Locatelli, Ut Orpheus Edizioni

 

Scientific Committee
Roberto De Caro, Roberto Illiano, Fulvia Morabito, Michela Niccolai,

Claudio Nuzzo, Luca Sala, and Massimiliano Sala

Keyonte Speakers
Prof. Simon McVeigh (Goldsmiths College, London)

Prof. Leon Plantinga (Yale University, New Haven, CT)

 

ProgrammeGallery

 

Concerto (2 luglio, Sala S. Domenico, Museo Civico 'Ala Ponzone)
'Il fortepiano e la nuova Europa'
musiche di:
J. S. Bach, W. A. Mozart, C. B. Balbastre, J. L. Dussek, J. Haydn, D. Cimarosa, M. Clementi, D. Steibelt, L. v. Beethoven
Andrea Coen - fortepiano (Square Clementi & co., 1820 ca., La=430 Hz)

 

Programme

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Instrumental Music and the Industrial Revolution
edited by Roberto Illiano and Luca Sala, Bologna, Ut Orpheus Edizioni 2010 (Ad Parnassum Studies, 5), pp. 652, ISBN: 978-88-8109-468-4.

In this volume we wanted to investigate the intersection between the Industrial Revolution and the aesthetic-musical field. In particular, we aimed to explore the European dimension of the cultural exchanges caused by the phenomenon of musical migration, together with the international relationships generated by the music printing industry, entrepreneurship and the market for musical instruments. The later eighteenth and earlier nineteenth centuries were a time of fundamental change in European life, proceeding from the revolutionary implications of the ideologies of Enlightenment, and reverberating in market economies, methods of manufacturing and agriculture, modes of travel, and population distribution. The development of new technologies resulted in the enlargement and improvement of the music printing industry, and in the widespread diffusion of music in private and public spheres. The Industrial Revolution brought about the 'modernization' of productive processes and, as a consequence, engendered a kind of 'globalization' of the musical market.
Contributors
Luca Aversano (ROME) - Claudio Bacciagaluppi (BERN) - Carmela Bongiovanni (GENOA) - Andrea Cardone (CASERTA) - Jen-yen Chen (TAIPEI, TAIWAN) - Simone Ciolfi (ROME) - Andrea Coen (ROME) - Therese Ellsworth (WASHINGTON, DC) - Joël-Marie Fauquet (PARIS) - Florence Gétreau (PARIS) - Consuelo Giglio (TRAPANI) - Outi Jokiharju (LONDON) - Roe-Min Kok (MONTREAL, QC) - Paul R. Laird (LAWRENCE, KS) - Marie Sumner Lott (STATE COLLEGE, PA) - Simon McVeigh (LONDON) - Elio Matassi (ROME) - Russ Manitt (MONTREAL, QC) - Jenny Nex (LONDON) - Leon Plantinga (NEW HAVEN, CT) - Alban Ramaut (SAINT-ÉTIENNE) - Rudolf Rasch (UTRECHT) - David Rowland (MILTON KEYNES, UK) - Laure Schnapper (PARIS) - Rohan H. Stewart-MacDonald (CAMBRIDGE, UK) - Renata Suchowiejko (KRAKÓW) - Maria Alice Volpe (RIO DE JANEIRO-BRASÍLIA)

 

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