Music appreciation
Label
Music appreciation
Name
Music appreciation
Focus
Actions
Incoming Resources
- Classical music without fear, a guide for general audiences, Marianne Williams Tobias
- The infinite variety of music, Leonard Bernstein
- Wake-up and goodnight
- Listen, Joseph Kerman, Gary Tomlinson, Yale University, with Vivian Kerman
- Music from inside out, Ned Rorem
- This is music;, a guide to the pleasures of listening
- Music, sense and nonsense, collected essays and lectures, Alfred Brendel
- Classical music 101, a complete guide to learning and loving classical music, by Fred Plotkin
- Who knew?, answers to questions about classical music you never thought to ask, Robert A. Cutietta
- Language of the spirit, an introduction to classical music, Jan Swafford
- Music as thought, listening to the symphony in the age of Beethoven, Mark Evan Bonds
- The cello suites, J.S. Bach, Pablo Caslas, and the search for a baroque masterpiece, Eric Siblin
- Why you love music, from Mozart to Metallica : the emotional power of beautiful sounds, John Powell
- Oh, be careful little ears, contemporary Christian music-- is that in the Bible?, Kimberly Smith with Lee Smith
- How to listen to, and understand, great music, Robert Greenberg
- Cool classical music, create & appreciate what makes music great!, Mary Lindeen
- The unanswered question, six talks at Harvard, Leonard Bernstein
- Who's afraid of classical music?, a highly arbitrary, thoroughly opinionated guide to listening to-and enjoying?--symphony, opera, and chamber music, Michael Walsh
- Listening to music, by Douglas Moore
- Jazz for toddlers II
- The bolero, In search of Cézanne, two films by Allan Miller
- The continuity of music;, a history of influence
- Beethoven lives upstairs, [story, Barbara Nichol]
- Beethoven's wig - sing along piano classics, Richard Perlmutter
- The history of classical music, Richard Fawkes
- The NPR curious listener's guide to classical music, Tim Smith.
- The complete idiot's guide to classical music, by Robert Sherman and Philip Seldon
- Beethoven's Eroica, a production of the San Francisco Symphony
- When do I clap?, a slightly irreverent guide to classical music and concert hall conduct, by Valerie Cruice
- Jazz, essential listening, Scott DeVeaux, University of Virginia, Gary Giddins
- Classical cats, a children's introduction to the orchestra, [composed by David Chesky]
- The School of Music, written by Meurig and Rachel Bowen ; illustrated by Daniel Frost
- Classical music, the 50 greatest composers and their 1,000 greatest works, Phil G. Goulding
- Shostakovich, Symphony no. 5, InCA Productions ; produced and directed by David Kennard and Joan Saffa
- Stravinsky's Rite of spring, a production of the San Francisco Symphony
- Classical music for dummies, by David Pogue and Scott Speck
- The young person's guide to the orchestra, Benjamin Britten's composition on CD narrated by Ben Kingsley, book written by Anita Ganeri
- The record book, a music lover's guide to the world of the phonograph, by David Hall
- Symphony no. 41, "Jupiter" (1788), music by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
- Hector Berlioz, Symphonie fantastique, InCA Productions
- The story of classical music, Darren Henley
- The new music lover's handbook., Edited by Elie Siegmeister
- The joy of classical music, a guide for you and your family, Joan Kennedy
- The art of sound;, an introduction to music, [by] Jack Sacher [and] James Eversole
- The making of music, written and presented by James Naughtie, volume 2
- Guidelines for style analysis
- Every song ever, twenty ways to listen in an age of musical plenty, Ben Ratliff
- Beethoven or bust, a practical guide to understanding and listening to great music, David Hurwitz
- Inside music, how to understand, listen to, and enjoy good music, Karl Haas ; drawings by Mona Mark
- The music pack, Ron van der Meer and Michael Berkeley
Outgoing Resources
- Focus1