Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 520
Trim: 6½ x 9
978-1-5381-1808-5 • Hardback • October 2018 • $129.00 • (£99.00)
978-1-5381-5824-1 • Paperback • August 2021 • $56.00 • (£43.00)
978-1-5381-1809-2 • eBook • October 2018 • $53.00 • (£41.00)
Andrea Olmstead is the author of six books, including a history of The Juilliard School, four books on composer Roger Sessions, and the e-book Who Was F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Daisy?. She has held three fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities, four writing fellowships from the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, and ten visiting scholar residences at the American Academy in Rome. Olmstead has taught music history at The Juilliard School, the New England Conservatory of Music Preparatory Division, and the graduate program at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst.
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Part I: 1915–1939
Chapter 1: Early Life and Musical Training
Chapter 2: The Combs Conservatory
Chapter 3: Persichetti as a Student
Chapter 4: Arch Street Church and the Silent Year
Chapter 5: The Philadelphia Conservatory of Music and Paul Nordoff
Chapter 6: Olga Samaroff
Chapter 7: The Philadelphia Orchestra, Stokowski, Ormandy
Chapter 8: Curtis Institute and Reiner
Chapter 9: The “Silent” Decade
Part II: 1938—1962
Chapter 10: Dorothy from Kansas
Chapter 11: Music in 1939 and 1940
Chapter 12: 1941–1943
Chapter 13: Roy Harris Chapter 14: The Philadelphia Conservatory and a Trial
Chapter 15: William Schuman and Juilliard
Chapter 16: Choral Settings of E. E. Cummings
Chapter 17: The Piano Sonata Period
Chapter 18: Divertimento for Band
Chapter 19: Harmonium
Chapter 20: 1952–1953
Chapter 21: The Schuman Book
Chapter 22: Hymns and Responses for the Church Year
Chapter 23: Symphony for Band
Chapter 24: The Year of the Song
Chapter 25: Seventh Symphony
Chapter 26: Mass
Chapter 27: Twentieth-Century Harmony
Part III: 1962–1987
Chapter 28: Peter Mennin and Lincoln Center
Chapter 29: Religious Music
Chapter 30: Masquerade
Chapter 31: The Choral(e) Years, 1966–1969
Chapter 32: The Creation
Chapter 33: Ninth Symphony
Chapter 34: Parables
Chapter 35: A Lincoln Address
Chapter 36: More Parables
Chapter 37: The Sibyl
Chapter 38: English Horn Concerto
Chapter 39: Mirror Music
Chapter 40: The Harpsichord Period
Chapter 41: 1985–1987
Chapter 42: Death and Posthumous Reputation
Notes
Bibliography
Index of Works
Index
About the Author
The appearance of this book—the first comprehensive biography of the composer—is an auspicious occasion. . . . [The book] reflects an extensive amount of research, providing a good deal of general background information within which to understand and appreciate the context from which Persichetti emerged; his family history, the musical life of Philadelphia, and the many musicians who played significant roles within his life. . . . Hopefully, Olmstead’s book will be a significant contribution to a growing interest in this composer, who is arguably one of the greatest America has produced. - Walter Simmons
— Fanfare Magazine
Olmstead has been a crucial chronicler of late twentieth century American concert music. In a new biography of Vincent Persichetti, she provides not only an account of the life and times of one of the most important composer-teachers of that time, but above all a stimulus to reconsider and reevaluate his work. Especially welcome is Olmstead’s recreation of his vivid personality, the naturalness of his gifts, and his varied and colorful friendships with his colleagues.
— John H. Harbison, composer, professor of music, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
This comprehensive biography of Vincent Persichetti, by one of his longtime colleagues at The Juilliard School, admirably serves both the composer’s memory and his music. Olmstead’s book includes a thorough examination of 167 opus-numbered works by a distinguished composer whose music is now gaining a fairer measure of reevaluation. No one who seeks a clear picture of the history of twentieth-century American concert music, sacred no less than secular, should fail to discover this book
— Mark DeVoto, professor of music, emeritus, Tufts University
Olmstead's book brings some order to Persichetti's joyful and frenetic life as a composer and artist. She is at here best when she supplies important context and biographical details. . . I also enjoy her no-holds-barred accounts of professional teacher-colleagues. . .I hope that this book will stimulate further interest in his work from performers and scholars---and that I get a chance to make my own contribution.
— American Record Guide