Books by "William Henry Hadow"

12 books found

The Oxford Treasury of English Literature: Growth of the drama

The Oxford Treasury of English Literature: Growth of the drama

by Grace Eleanor Hadow, William Henry Hadow

1916

The Oxford History of Music

The Oxford History of Music

by William Henry Hadow

1904

The Oxford Treasury of English Literature: Jacobean to Victorian

The Oxford Treasury of English Literature: Jacobean to Victorian

by Grace Eleanor Hadow, William Henry Hadow

1908

The Oxford Treasury of English Literature...: Old English to Jacobean

The Oxford Treasury of English Literature...: Old English to Jacobean

by Grace Eleanor Hadow, William Henry Hadow

1906

The Oxford Treasury of English Literature

The Oxford Treasury of English Literature

by Grace Eleanor Hadow, William Henry Hadow

1907

The Viennese Period

The Viennese Period

by William Henry Hadow

1904

A Croatian Composer

A Croatian Composer

by William Henry Hadow

1897

A History of the Sonata Idea

A History of the Sonata Idea

by William S. Newman

2018 · UNC Press Books

This definitive volume, the second, largest, and most central in Newman’s History of the Sonata Idea, covers the period from the first sample Italian sonatas using the new techniques of the Alberti bass about 1735 to the succession of masterpieces by Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven which extended until about 1820. It is one of the few books to deal exclusively with the classical era in music. Originally published in 1963. A UNC Press Enduring Edition — UNC Press Enduring Editions use the latest in digital technology to make available again books from our distinguished backlist that were previously out of print. These editions are published unaltered from the original, and are presented in affordable paperback formats, bringing readers both historical and cultural value.

Studies in Modern Music, First Series

Studies in Modern Music, First Series

by William Henry Hadow

1892

Twenty-four Portraits

Twenty-four Portraits

by William Rothenstein

1920

Written before, but published after The First World War, this volume’s plea for a national system of education which will produce a nation of prosperous, morally fulfilled people able to live at peace with other nations is doubly poignant given the sacrifice of the ‘lost generation’. However, the author also sees the horror of the War as an opportunity to change human destiny through education, an opportunity to abandon the narrow system of education in favour of one which will ‘bring education in touch with life’ and provide Britain with the intellectual and moral efficiency necessary to steer her through the following turbulent years of the twentieth century. Covering the core subjects of the English school curriculum in the early twentieth century the chapters in The Modern Teacher, if somewhat utopian, describe best practice in teaching of the particular subject and suggest possible improvements. One chapter also discusses the importance of the relatively new subject of citizenship, as well as the moral education of pupils.

Collected Essays

Collected Essays

by William Henry Hadow

1928