Drawing together information from a wide variety of primary and secondary sources, in particular treatises and tutors, David Golby demonstrates that while Britain produced many fewer instrumental virtuosi than its foreign neighbours, there developed a more serious and widespread interest in the cultivation of music throughout the nineteenth century. Discussion of general developments and issues is followed by a detailed examination of violin pedagogy, method and content which is used as a guide to society's influence on cultural trends and informs the discussion of other instruments and institutional training that follows.The book includes a chronology of developments in 19thcentury British music education, and a particularly useful feature for future researchers in this field is a representative chronology of principal British instrumental treatises 17801900 that features over 700 items.
Instrumental Teaching in Nineteenthcentury Britain
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