Abstract

In the world of musicology, as in the world of performance, contemporary attitudes about the guitar are conditioned by the preeminence of the modern "classical guitar," an instrument that came into being in the mid-nineteenth century but is still widely used to play music from the last five hundred years. The history of this particular kind of guitar culminated triumphantly on the solo concert stage, thanks largely to Andrés Segovia, whose musicianship and charisma earned him the status of a Rubinstein, Casals, or Heifetz. Yet Segovia's victory was Pyrrhic: his fame benefitted from and enhanced the modesty of his instrument, so that even he could not slow the guitar's gradual abandonment by the art music mainstream, a process begun decades before his birth and continuing to this day.

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