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The Boston Pops: An American Institution and Its European Roots
This article traces the historical origins and influences that led the early leaders of the Boston Symphony Orchestra (BSO) to offer both “symphony concerts” and “popular concerts” on the same stage. Although scholars of nineteenth-century orchestral music align the end of “mixed” repertory with the rise of non-touring orchestral institutions based in urban centers, that tradition continued far into the twentieth century. Exploring the history of the BSO affords a deeper understanding into the division of the so-called “classical” orchestral repertory from the “popular,” and the emergence of orchestral pops series in cities across the United States.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Musicological Research publishes original articles on all aspects of the discipline of music: historical musicology, style and repertory studies, music theory, ethnomusicology, music education, organology, and interdisciplinary studies. Because contemporary music scholarship addresses critical and analytical issues from a multiplicity of viewpoints, the Journal of Musicological Research seeks to present studies from all perspectives, using the full spectrum of methodologies. This variety makes the Journal a place where scholarly approaches can coexist, in all their harmony and occasional discord, and one that is not allied with any particular school or viewpoint.