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From Psalm to Symphony: A History of Music in New England. (Book Reviews: National Musics).

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| September 01, 2002 | Silverberg, Ann L. | COPYRIGHT 2002 Music Library Association, Inc. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

From Psalm to Symphony: A History of Music in New England. By Nicholas E. Tawa. Boston: Northeastern University Press, 2001. [xvi. 466 p. ISBN 155553-491-0. $35.] Illustrations, bibliography, index.

From Psalm to Symphony: A History of Music in New England is professor emeritus (University of Masssachusetts, Boston) Nicholas E. Tawa's latest addition to music literature. In this book, he surveys the contributions the six northeasternmost states have made to American musical culture, concentrating on the region's major art music composers and giving less space to the histories of organizations and institutions. The work is divided into fifteen chapters, the first few covering the expected early psalmsinging traditions and singing schools before venturing into the world of Lowell Mason, sophisticated musical undertakings, and music as an element in cultural uplift that became a constant thread in the region.

The book is short on illustrations and lacks music examples, yet it is rich in detail, and perhaps in some cases too rich. The picture that emerges is one in which great achievements and well-received compositions have suddenly or gradually (and in many cases undeservedly) fallen by the wayside. For example, the chapter on John Knowles Paine and George Whitefield Chadwick provides numerous reports of fine works and glowingly received first performances, yet pieces such as Chadwick's opera The Padrone remain unperformed and in manuscript, while the bulk of Paine's orchestral works and Chadwick's more than 125 songs are so rarely heard on current concert programs that their presence as living music verges on extinction. Tawa's descriptions of many works are evocative, making the reader anxious to hear the scores or at least to view a music example. The author demonstrates tremendous breadth and depth in reading, research, and intimate familiarity with countless musical works throughout the book, and is unafraid of making assessments of the many works he surveys.

While From Psalm to Symphony's concentration on a single region enables Tawa to cover many subjects and individuals in more detail than is found in the many published surveys of American music, many of the subjects treated here have already been the focus of separate monographs. Tawa's new book thus finds itself straddling well-known topics such as William Billings, Lowell Mason, George Whitefield Chadwick, Horatio Parker, Amy Beach, Charles Ives, Carl Ruggles, the Boston Symphony Orchestra, and the Handel and Haydn Society, while less successfully conveying a sense of the content of New England musical life and music education in general. Emphasizing the roles of the city of Boston and Harvard University may be well-nigh inevitable in treating this subject, yet other stories, such as the establishment and growing pains of the Yale University School of Music and the departments of music at New England's other major universities (Brown, for example) escape mention.

Seven composers, all productive during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, are given special prominence: chapter 6 surveys the work of John Knowles Paine and George Whitefield Chadwick; chapter 7, the music of Horatio Parker, Arthur Foote, and Edward MacDowell; and chapter 8, that of Amy Beach and Charles Ives. Of these, Edward MacDowell has the most tenuous connection to New England, being a native New Yorker who lived in Boston only eight years, later summering in New Hampshire during his appointment ...

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