12 Introduction
         18 EARLY MUSIC: 1000--1400
         22 Psalmody is the weapon of the monk
         24 Ut, re, mi, fa, sol, la
         26 We should sing psalms on a ten-string psaltery
         28 To sing is to pray twice
         32 Tandaradei, sweetly sang the nightingale
         36 Music is a science that makes you laugh, sing, and dance
         38 RENAISSANCE: 1400--1600
         42 Not a single piece of music composed before the last 40 years is worth hearing
         43 Tongue, proclaim the mystery of the glorious body
         44 Hear the voyce and prayer
         46 The eternal father of Italian music
         52 That is the nature of hymns---they make us want to repeat them
         54 All the airs and madrigals ... whisper softness
         55 This feast... did even ravish and stupefie all those strangers that never heard the like
         56 My lute, awake!
         58 BAROQUE: 1600--1750
         62 One of the most magnificent and expensefull diversions
         64 Music must move the whole man
         70 Lully merits with good reason the title of prince of French musicians
         72 He had a peculiar genius to express the energy of English words
         78 The object of churches is not the bawling of choristers
         80 The new Orpheus of our times
         82 The uniting of the French and Italian styles must create the perfection of music
         84 What the English like is something they can beat time to
         90 Do not expect any profound intention, but rather an ingenious jesting with art
         92 Spring has come, and with it gaiety
         98 The end and final aim of all music should be none other than the glory of God
         106 Telemann is above all praise
         107 His whole heart and soul were in his harpsichord
         108 Bach is like an astronomer, who ... finds the most wonderful stars
         112 CLASSICAL: 1750--1820
         116 Its forte is like thunder, its crescendoa cataract
         118 The most moving act in all of opera
         120 We must play from the soul, not like trained birds
         122 I was forced to become original
         128 The most tremendous genius raised Mozart above all masters
         132 The object of the piano is to substitute one performer for a whole orchestra
         134 We walk, by the power of music, in joy through death's dark night
         138 I live only in my notes
         142 ROMANTIC: 1810--1920
         146 The violinist is that peculiarly human phenomenon ... half tiger, half poet
         148 Give me a laundry list, and I will set it to music
         149 Music is truly love itself
         150 No one feels another's grief, no one understands another's joy
         156 Music is like a dream. One that I cannot hear
         162 Instrumentation is at the head of the march
         164 Simplicity is the final achievement
         166 My symphonies would have reached Opus 100 if I had written them down
         170 The last note was drowned ... in a unanimous volley of plaudits
         174 I love Italian opera---it's so reckless
         176 Who holds the devil, let him hold him well
         178 And the dancers whirl around gaily in the waltz's giddy mazes
         179 I live in music like a fish in water
         180 Opera must make people weep, feel horrified, die
         188 He ... comes as if sent straight from God
         190 The notes dance up there on the stage
         192 A symphony must be like the world. It must contain everything
         194 Emotional art is a kind of illness
         198 If a composer could say what he had to say in words, he would not bother saying it in music
         202 NATIONALISM: 1830--1920
         206 My fatherland means more to me than anything else
         207 Mussorgsky typifies the genius of Russia
         208 I am sure my music has a taste of cod fish in it
         210 I wanted to do something different
         212 The music of the people is like a rare and lovely flower
         216 Music is a language of the intangible
         218 The art of music above all the other arts is expression of the soul
         220 I am a slave to my themes, and submit to their demands
         222 Spanish music with a universal accent
         223 A wonderful maze of rhythmical dexterities
         224 MODERN: 1900--1950
         228 I go to see the shadow you have become
         232 I want women to turn their minds to big and difficult jobs
         240 An audience shouldn't listen with complacency
         246 I haven't understood a bar of music in my life, but I have felt it
         252 And ever winging up and up, our valley is his golden cup
         254 Stand up and take your dissonance like a man
         256 I have never written a note I didn't mean
         258 Life is a lot like jazz it's better when you improvise
         262 A mad extravaganza at the edge of the abyss
         263 I come with the youthful spirit of my country, with youthful music
         264 Musically, there is not a single center of gravity in this piece
         266 The only love affair I ever had was with music
         268 Science alone can infuse music with youthful vigor
         270 A nation creates music. The composer only arranges it
         272 I detest imitation. I detest hackneyed devices
         273 Balinese music retained a rhythmic vitality both primitive and joyous
         274 Real music is always revolutionary
         280 My music is natural, like a waterfall
         282 Never was I listened to with such rapt attention and comprehension
         284 I must create order out of chaos
         286 The music is so knit ... that it takes you in very strong hands and leads you into its own world
         288 Composing is like driving down a foggy road
         294 CONTEMPORARY
         298 Sound is the vocabulary of nature
         302 I can't understand why people are frightened of new ideas; I'm frightened of the old ones
         306 He has changed our view of musical time and form
         308 The role of the musician ... is perpetual exploration
         309 Close communion with the people is the natural soil nourishing all my work
         310 I was struck by the emotional charge of the work
         312 Once you become an ism, what you're doing is dead
         314 I desire to carve ... a single painful tone as intense as silence itself
         316 In music ... things don't get better or worse: they evolve and transform themselves
         318 If you tell me a lie, let it be a black lie
         320 The process of substituting beats for rests
         321 We were so far ahead ... because everyone else stayed so far behind
         322 This must be the first purpose of art ... to change us
         323 I could start out from the chaos and create order in it
         324 Volcanic, expansive, dazzling---and obsessive
         325 My music is written for ears
         326 Blue ... like the sky. Where all possibilities soar
         328 The music uses simple building blocks and grows organically from there ...
         329 This is the core of who we are and what we need to be
         330 Directory
         340 Glossary
         344 Index
         351 Quote Attributions
         352 Acknowledgments
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