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129 Songs

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How many songs did Charles Ives (1874–1954) write? For years the songs of this iconoclastic American composer have only been known in imperfect editions of his 114 Songs (privately printed in 1922) and two collections published in Henry Cowell's New Music series: Thirty-Four Songs (1933) and Eighteen [with the title later changed to the correct Nineteen] Songs (1935), which include mostly reprints from 114 Songs (some with revisions) plus nine new songs. Virtually every page of these three standard songbooks reveals musical and textual errors, problematic notation, and puzzling inconsistencies. The MUSA collection of 129 Songs is a critical edition of the 114 Songs, thirteen songs first published later, and two unpublished “songs without words”—in other words, all of Ives's solo songs except the fifty-four already published in critical editions by the late John Kirkpatrick (Eleven Songs and Two Harmonizations [1968], Sunrise [1977], and Forty Earlier Songs [1993]). The MUSA edition is based upon a comparative study of Ives's manuscript sketches and fair copies; his many copyists' scores; songs he revised for the New Music imprints; annotations by him in personal copies of those imprints and of 114 Songs; and manuscript and published text sources (by Ives, his wife Harmony Twichell Ives, and many other authors). Additional critical commentary materials are available at the Charles Ives Society website: https://charlesives.org/sites/default/files/Ives_129_Songs.pdf NB: Permission to reprint copyrighted material included in this edition does not extend to electronic formats. Please refer to the print version of this title for the music of the 129 songs (pp. 1–390).
A-R Editions
Title: 129 Songs
Description:
How many songs did Charles Ives (1874–1954) write? For years the songs of this iconoclastic American composer have only been known in imperfect editions of his 114 Songs (privately printed in 1922) and two collections published in Henry Cowell's New Music series: Thirty-Four Songs (1933) and Eighteen [with the title later changed to the correct Nineteen] Songs (1935), which include mostly reprints from 114 Songs (some with revisions) plus nine new songs.
Virtually every page of these three standard songbooks reveals musical and textual errors, problematic notation, and puzzling inconsistencies.
The MUSA collection of 129 Songs is a critical edition of the 114 Songs, thirteen songs first published later, and two unpublished “songs without words”—in other words, all of Ives's solo songs except the fifty-four already published in critical editions by the late John Kirkpatrick (Eleven Songs and Two Harmonizations [1968], Sunrise [1977], and Forty Earlier Songs [1993]).
The MUSA edition is based upon a comparative study of Ives's manuscript sketches and fair copies; his many copyists' scores; songs he revised for the New Music imprints; annotations by him in personal copies of those imprints and of 114 Songs; and manuscript and published text sources (by Ives, his wife Harmony Twichell Ives, and many other authors).
Additional critical commentary materials are available at the Charles Ives Society website: https://charlesives.
org/sites/default/files/Ives_129_Songs.
pdf NB: Permission to reprint copyrighted material included in this edition does not extend to electronic formats.
Please refer to the print version of this title for the music of the 129 songs (pp.
1–390).

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