- Jason Grant
Jason Benjamin Grant, a music historian, is most known for his work uncovering lost music by Telemann and Bach.
He studied at
Bates College and then at theUniversity of Pittsburgh , where he obtained his doctorate in 2005 with a dissertation entitled "The rise of lyricism and the decline of biblical narration in the late liturgical passions of Georg Philipp Telemann". [ [http://etd.library.pitt.edu/ETD/available/etd-04222005-050811/unrestricted/grantjb_etdPitt2005.pdf Grant's Ph.D. thesis (University of Pittsburgh website, accessed 26 April 2007)] ]He presented material from his dissertation at the 2003 meeting of the Wolfenbütteler Arbeitskreises für Barockforschung at the Herzog August Bibliothek in Wolfenbüttel, Germany. Part or all of the dissertation was published as "Passion, Affekt und Leidenschaft in der Frühen Neuzeit (Suffering, Emotion, and Passion in the Early Modern Period)", Harrasowitz Verlag (Wiesbaden, 2005).
Following that, he was visiting assistant professor of music at the University of Pittsburgh.
During the 1990s, Jason Grant was known as an
organist , with a special affinity forBaroque music .Currently, Grant is an Editor-in-Residence of the for the
Packard Humanities Institute . [ [http://www.cpebach.org/cpeb/pdf/EditorialGuidelines-rev12-06.pdf Editorial Guidelines] ] [ [http://www.google.com/interstitial?url=http://www.music.pitt.edu/graduate/alumniPlacement.html Department of Music] University of Pittsburgh]Bibliography
Citation
last = Grant
first = Jason
author-link = Jason Grant
title = Book Review: Jocques henry. Mozart the Freemason: The Masonic Influence on His Musical Genius
journal = Newsletter of the Mozart Society of America
volume = 11
issue = 2
pages = 10
date = 27 August 2007
year = 2007
issn = 1527-3733References
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