Description George Rochberg, American Composer, is the first comprehensive study devoted to tracing and putting into a rich cultural context the career of George Rochberg, widely acknowledged as one of the most prominent musical postmodernists.
Amy Lynn Wlodarski is associate professor of music at Dickinson College..
As such it reveals Personal Trauma and aesthetic recovery to be the basis of Rochberg\'s postwar ideas about humanism, musical quotation, and neotonality.
It argues that Rochberg\'s military service was a transformative life experience for the young humanist, one that crucially shaped his worldview and influenced his Artistic Creativity for the next sixty years.
The book significantly expands our understanding of Rochberg\'s creative work by reconstructing and examining the earliest seeds of his aesthetic thinking--which took root while he served in Patton\'s Third Army--and following their development through his mature compositional period into the final stages of his long career.
Drawing from unpublished materials including diaries, letters, sketches, and Personal papers, the book traces the impact of two specific Personal traumas--Rochberg\'s service as an infantryman in World War II and the premature death of his son--on his work as a leading composer, college educator, and public intellectual.
Description George Rochberg, American Composer, is the first comprehensive study devoted to tracing and putting into a rich cultural context the career of George Rochberg, widely acknowledged as one of the most prominent musical postmodernists