The Heckelphone
A Window into the History of Music
Language: English - ISBN: 9789403699493 - 402 pages
€39.90
Tres Mundi
Synopsis
The heckelpone is a woodwind instrument invented at the dawn of the 20th century. Inspired by Richard Wagner and prominently used by Richard Strauss, it soon rose to prominence in its native Germany and far beyond. In this book, the history and use of this curious and obscure instrument serves as a thread running through the history of music, from the romantic period to the late 1960s.
From the invention and making of musical instruments to the origins of widely known and all-but-forgotten composers and their works, from New Orleans jazz to atonal music, from 19th-century Germany to 20th-century Mexico, “The Heckelphone” provides glimpses into “a past of which one has been ignorant” — a past made of music, musicians, conductors, composers, instrument makers and collectors, who all play their parts in a series of intriguing, inter-weaving stories, told here to educate and entertain.
About Holger Hoos
Holger Hoos fell under the spell of the heckelphone
as a teenager, but then had to wait for over three decades
before acquiring one of the fewer than 200 specimens
known to have ever existed. Meanwhile, he studied the bassoon with Benedikt Manemann, Michael Held and Heiko Dechert,
but then decided to pursue an academic career in computer
science, where part of his work has been on topics in
computer music. He now holds an Alexander von Humboldt Professorship
in Artificial Intelligence at RWTH Aachen University
(Germany), as well as a professorship in machine learning
at Universiteit Leiden (The Netherlands) and an adjunct
professorship in computer science at the University of British Columbia (Canada). Since 2019, he studies and plays the heckelphone.
Product specifications
Binding | Hardcover |
---|---|
Language | English |
Publishing date | Friday, 7 June 2024 |
Edition | 1 |
ISBN | 9789403699493 |
Pagecount | 402 |
Interior color | Full color |
Size | 155 x 235 mm |
Publisher | Tres Mundi |
Author | Holger Hoos |
Category | Art and culture > Muzic |