Faculty: Musicology
Richard Kramer
Distinguished Professor, Graduate Center
(Ph.D. Princeton University)

Ph.D./DMA Program in Music, CUNY Graduate Center
365 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10016
Richard Kramer writes on the music and aesthetics of the late
eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. His Distant Cycles: Schubert and the
Conceiving of Song won the Kinkeldey Award of the American Musicological Society and
an ASCAP-Deems Taylor Prize; a review essay on the Mozart sketches (Notes, Vol.
57/1, September 2000) won the Eva Judd O'Meara Award of the Music Library Association.
Kramer was named a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Science in 2001. He
was Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of the American Musicological
Society and Vice President of the American Musicological Society.
Kramer came to the Graduate Center in 1998, having previously taught at
Stony Brook University, where he served as Dean of Humanities and Fine Arts.
Recent doctoral seminars include: Surfing the Enlightenment; After
Enlightenment: Beethoven Inside Out; The Poetic Imagination: Schubert,
Schumann and the Beginnings of Romanticism; Creative Copies and the
Anxieties of Influence; Sketches, Fragments, Fantasy; On Late Style: an
Interdisciplinary Expedition (with David Greetham, English); Hearing Mahler
[Fall 2008].
REPRESENTATIVE RECENT PUBLICATIONS
Unfinished Music. Oxford and New York: Oxford University
Press, 2008.
"Ein Trittico: Zur Wiedervereinigung eines Skizzenblattes von Ludwig van
Beethoven," [together with Michael Ladenburger], in Festschrift Otto Biba
zum 60. Geburtstag, ed. Ingrid Fuchs (Tutzing: Hans Schneider, 2006),
731-36.
"Diderot’s Paradoxe and C. P. E. Bach’s Empfindungen," in
C. P. E. Bach Studies, ed. Annette Richards (Cambridge: University of
Cambridge Press, 2006), 6-24.
“To Edit a Sketchbook.” Review essay in Beethoven Forum, XII/1
(2005), 82-96.
“‘Sonate, que me veux-tu?’ Opus 30, Opus 31, and the Anxieties of Genre.”
The Beethoven Violin Sonatas: History, Criticism, Performance, ed. Lewis
Lockwood and Mark Kroll (Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press,
2004), 47-60.
[The Mozart Fragments.] Review essay, Neue Mozart Ausgabe X, 30/4, in
Notes: The Quarterly Journal of the Music Library Association, LXI/1
(September 2004), 231-37.
"Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach and the Aesthetics of Patricide."
Historical Musicology: Sources, Methods, Interpretations,
ed. Roberta Marvin and Stephen Crist (Rochester: University of Rochester
Press, 2004), 121-142.
"Beethovens Opus 90 und die Fenster zur Vergangenheit." Beethoven und die
Rezeption der Alten Musik, ed. Hans-Werner Kuethen (Bonn: Beethoven-Haus,
2002), 93-119.
"Lisch aus, mein Licht: Song, Fugue and the Symptoms of a Late Style." Beethoven
Forum 7 (Lincoln and London: University of Nebraska Press, 1999), pp. 67-87.
Ludwig van Beethoven. A Newly Recovered Leaf of Sketches from the Summer of 1800
for Beethoven's String Quartet Opus 18 No. 2. Facsimile, with Transcription
and
Commentary by Richard Kramer. (Bonn: Beethoven-Haus, 1999).
"In Search of Palestrina: Beethoven in the Archives." Haydn, Mozart, and
Beethoven: Studies in the Music of the Classical Period. Essays in Honour of Alan Tyson,
ed. Sieghard Brandenburg (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998), pp. 283-300.
"The Hedgehog: Of Fragments Finished and Unfinished." 19th-Century Music
XXI (Fall 1997), 134-148.
Ludwig van Beethoven: A Sketchbook from the Summer of 1800. Facsimile, with
transcription and commentary by Richard Kramer. 2 vols. Bonn: Beethoven-Haus Bonn, 1996.
"Not to Hear the Italian Symphony." The Politics of Research, ed. E.
Ann Kaplan and George Levine (New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1996), pp. 170-78.
Distant Cycles: Schubert and the Conceiving of Song. Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 1994.
"Between Cavatina and Ouverture: Opus 130 and the Voices of Narrative." Beethoven
Forum 1 (Lincoln and London: University of Nebraska Presss, 1992), pp. 165-89.
"Cadenza Contra Text: Mozart in Beethoven's Hands." 19th-Century Music
XV (Fall 1991), 116-131.
"The Sketch Itself." Beethoven's Compositional Process, ed. William
Kinderman (University of Nebraska Press, 1991), pp. 3-5.
"On the Possibilities of a Grammar for the New Music." Quo Vadis Musica?
Bericht ueber das Symposium der Alexander von Humboldt Stiftung (Kassel: Baerenreiter
Verlag, 1990), pp. 46-53.
Gradus ad Parnassum: Beethoven, Schubert, and the Romance of Counterpoint." 19th-Century
Music XI/2 (Fall 1987), 107-120.