Jump to content

Musical Courier: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
replaced: Antonin Dvořák → Antonín Dvořák using AWB
m Replace unicode entity nbsp for character [NBSP] (or space) per WP:NBSP + other fixes, replaced: → (2) using AWB (10331)
Line 2: Line 2:
The '''''Musical Courier''''' was a 19th- and 20th-century American music [[trade publication]] which began publication in [[1880 in music|1880]] and became noted as preeminent in its field.<ref name=Adams>[http://www.scarecrowpress.com/Catalog/Singlebook.shtml?command=Search&db=%5EDB/CATALOG.db&eqSKUdatarq=0810866587 Peter H. Adams, ''An Annotated Index to Selected Articles from'' The Musical Courier, ''1880–1840'']</ref>
The '''''Musical Courier''''' was a 19th- and 20th-century American music [[trade publication]] which began publication in [[1880 in music|1880]] and became noted as preeminent in its field.<ref name=Adams>[http://www.scarecrowpress.com/Catalog/Singlebook.shtml?command=Search&db=%5EDB/CATALOG.db&eqSKUdatarq=0810866587 Peter H. Adams, ''An Annotated Index to Selected Articles from'' The Musical Courier, ''1880–1840'']</ref>


The publication included [[editorials]], [[obituaries]], announcements, scholarly articles and investigatory writing about [[musical instruments]] and music in general. These included "construction practices, descriptions, tools, exhibitions and collections, new technologies, and laws and legal actions" relating to the [[music industry]]. There were articles on "companies and manufacturers of instruments, . . . entries on [[patents]], [[trade marks]], and designs for new or improved instruments", as well as reporting on "[[African-American music]] and culture, [[women's rights]], [[John Philip Sousa]], [[Antonín Dvořák]] and the influence of the rise of [[Nazi Germany]] on [[European music|music in Europe]]."<ref name=Adams/>
The publication included [[editorials]], [[obituaries]], announcements, scholarly articles and investigatory writing about [[musical instruments]] and music in general. These included "construction practices, descriptions, tools, exhibitions and collections, new technologies, and laws and legal actions" relating to the [[music industry]]. There were articles on "companies and manufacturers of instruments, . . . entries on [[patents]], [[trade marks]], and designs for new or improved instruments", as well as reporting on "[[African-American music]] and culture, [[women's rights]], [[John Philip Sousa]], [[Antonín Dvořák]] and the influence of the rise of [[Nazi Germany]] on [[European music|music in Europe]]."<ref name=Adams/>


In 1897, Marc A. Blumenberg, the publisher, "separated the musical and industrial departments" of the magazine and began publishing the ''Musical Courier Extra'' "strictly as a trade edition."<ref>[http://www.ebooksread.com/authors-eng/alfred-dolge/pianos-and-their-makers-glo/page-21-pianos-and-their-makers-glo.shtml Alfred Dolge, ''Pianos and Their Makers,'' Part V, Chapter 2, Page 417, in the Electronic Library]</ref>
In 1897, Marc A. Blumenberg, the publisher, "separated the musical and industrial departments" of the magazine and began publishing the ''Musical Courier Extra'' "strictly as a trade edition."<ref>[http://www.ebooksread.com/authors-eng/alfred-dolge/pianos-and-their-makers-glo/page-21-pianos-and-their-makers-glo.shtml Alfred Dolge, ''Pianos and Their Makers,'' Part V, Chapter 2, Page 417, in the Electronic Library]</ref>

Revision as of 10:08, 30 July 2014

The Musical Courier was a 19th- and 20th-century American music trade publication which began publication in 1880 and became noted as preeminent in its field.[1]

The publication included editorials, obituaries, announcements, scholarly articles and investigatory writing about musical instruments and music in general. These included "construction practices, descriptions, tools, exhibitions and collections, new technologies, and laws and legal actions" relating to the music industry. There were articles on "companies and manufacturers of instruments, . . . entries on patents, trade marks, and designs for new or improved instruments", as well as reporting on "African-American music and culture, women's rights, John Philip Sousa, Antonín Dvořák and the influence of the rise of Nazi Germany on music in Europe."[1]

In 1897, Marc A. Blumenberg, the publisher, "separated the musical and industrial departments" of the magazine and began publishing the Musical Courier Extra "strictly as a trade edition."[2]

There was also a London, England, edition, active in the 1890s.[3]

Former University of Southern California professor Lisa Roma, an operatic soprano, was the publisher and owner from 1958 to 1961.[4]

References