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Kyle Gann is a composer and the Taylor Hawver and Frances Bortle Hawver Professor of Music at Bard College. He is the author of The Arithmetic of Listening: Tuning Theory and History for the Impractical Musician; No Such Thing as Silence: John Cage's 4'33"; and Robert Ashley.
"Goes far beyond any existing literature in this domain. It's
possibly the best analytical writing about a major Ives composition
that I've seen."--William Brooks, University of York
"It is refreshing to read such a passionate description of a major
work of art which is so profoundly meaningful to the author.
Practically every page is informative, or contains new insight into
the work. By far the best work ever done on the subject."--Neely
Bruce, Wesleyan University
"Not only an important addition to the thinking about Ives, but a
moving companion to the artist and the Concord."
*Wire*
"This is a book which no Ives scholar or enthusiast can be without.
It is quite indispensable, a glowing and lasting monument to the
forty years which Gann has spent loving and working on his
subject."
*Journal of Experimental Music Studies*
"This is an interesting and important book. . . . Highly
recommended."
*Choice*
"In Charles Ives's Concord: Essays After a Sonata Gann's analysis
takes the form of a kind of biblical exegesis, where canonical
texts are pored over by ever-new generations. He achieves a balance
between writing for Ives specialists and delivering a text that is
compulsively readable. . . . This is a book to savor with
headphones."
*Times Literary Supplement*
"A major work gets a major analysis: a masterpiece gets a
masterpiece."
*Do the M@th*
"A treatise on past and future performance practice for the
'Concord' Sonata. This is an absolutely essential reading for
performers interested in this work."
*Notes*
"Gann's passionate survey of the Concord Sonata and its various
offshoots and progeny is and should remain an indispensable
contribution to Ives studies and twentieth-century keyboard
literature."
*American Music*
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