The Saxophone

Stephen Cottrell author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Yale University Press

Published:15th Jan '13

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The Saxophone cover

In the first fully comprehensive study of one of the world’s most iconic musical instruments, Stephen Cottrell examines the saxophone’s various social, historical, and cultural trajectories, and illustrates how and why this instrument, with its idiosyncratic shape and sound, became important for so many different music-makers around the world.

After considering what led inventor Adolphe Sax to develop this new musical wind instrument, Cottrell explores changes in saxophone design since the 1840s before examining the instrument's role in a variety of contexts: in the military bands that contributed so much to the saxophone's global dissemination during the nineteenth century; as part of the rapid expansion of American popular music around the turn of the twentieth century; in classical and contemporary art music; in world and popular music; and, of course, in jazz, a musical style with which the saxophone has become closely identified.

“Everything you wanted to know about sax – but were afraid to ask.”—The New York Post * The New York Post *
Winner of the Bessaraboff Prize given by the American Musical Instrument Society. -- American Musical Instrument Society * Bessaraboff Prize *

ISBN: 9780300100419

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 1270g

352 pages