Scarecrow Press
Pages: 128
Trim: 6¾ x 8⅜
978-0-8108-5141-2 • Paperback • October 2004 • $56.00 • (£43.00)
Steven E. Plank is Chair of the Department of Musicology at Oberlin College. He is the author of the chapter "'Wrapped all in Woe': Passion Music in Late Medieval England" in The Broken Body (Groningen, 1998) and The Way to Heavens Doore: An Introduction to Liturgical Process and Musical Style (Scarecrow, 1994). He has also been a contributor to diverse music journals, including Early Music, Musical Times, Music & Letters, and Choir and Organ.
Part 1 Acknowledgments
Chapter 2 1 Introduction
Chapter 3 2 "It's on Account of the Sound It Is"
Chapter 4 3 The Ensemble
Chapter 5 4 What Pitches Shall We Sing?
Chapter 6 5 Rhythm, Tempo, and the Conductor's Gesture
Chapter 7 6 Articulation, Ornamentation, and Interpretation
Chapter 8 7 Putting Things into Practice
Chapter 9 8 So What?
Part 10 Bibliography
Part 11 Index
Part 12 About the Author
...the volume alerts conductors and conductors-in-training to important performance issues. Recommended.
— Choice Reviews
...this book will certainly be of value to choral singers and directors who perform early music.
— Church Music Quarterly
With an emphasis on the liturgical polyphony of the Renaissance, Plank discusses various aspects of historical choral performance practice. Some of the performance issues addressed include timber, pitch, articulation, ornamentation, tempo, and tuning. Although likely to be of interest to professionals specializing in early music, the text is particularly aimed at conductors and singers who come to "early music" from the mainstream.
— Reference and Research Book News
Stephen Plank's book clearly offers the fruits of years of practice and thought on the subject of teaching historical choral singing. It will be of considerable value to singers in and directors of such groups, but also, in casting light on and offering potential solutions to perennial issues and problems, it contains much food for thought for professionals in the field.
— Andrew Kirkman, conductor