About the Book
        
        McGill University's Faculty of Music - now the Schulich School - has been a centre of new music in Canada for decades, helping to shape contemporary composition, electro-acoustic research, performance, and sound recording. Compositional Crossroads focuses on McGill's location in a culturally dynamic city and shows how the interplay between place, community, identity, and memory and individuals, faculty, and students created institutional pathways that have lead to an explosion of new music activity.  Visionary deans, composers, musicologists, and students associated with the Faculty of Music between 1970-2004 offer insights into the early contributions of Istvan Anhalt, the birth of the Electronic Music Studio and McGill Records, the importance of visiting composer-teachers, opportunities for composer/performer collaborations, the development of performing spaces and ensembles, and new ways of considering sonic creativity. Several essays are devoted to major composers who taught at the school, including Bengt Hambraeus, alcides lanza, Brian Cherney, Bruce Mather, John Rea, and Denys Bouliane.
Contributors include Robin Elliott (Toronto), alcides lanza (emeritus, McGill), John Rea (McGill), Paul Pedersen (emeritus, Toronto), James Harley (Guelph), Laurie Radford (City University, London), Bruce Mather (McGill), Pamela Jones (author, Montreal), Neil Middleton (Montreal), Steven Huebner (McGill), Jerome Blais (Dalhousie), and Patrick Levesque (Universite de Montreal).
Table of Contents: 
Contributors include Robin Elliott (Toronto), alcides lanza (emeritus, McGill), John Rea (McGill), Paul Pedersen (emeritus, Toronto), James Harley (Guelph), Laurie Radford (City University, London), Bruce Mather (McGill), Pamela Jones (author, Montreal), Neil Middleton (Montreal), Steven Huebner (McGill), Jerome Blais (Dalhousie), and Patrick Levesque (Universite de Montreal)
About the Author : 
Eleanor V. Stubley is associate professor, Schulich School of Music, and director of graduate studies, Schulich School of Music, McGill University. Stubley is also a conductor and associate of the John Adaskin Project of the Canadian Music Centre.
Review : 
"I am reminded of McLuhan's comment that 'we shape our tools and thereafter our tools shape us.' Compositional Crossroads - timely and of tremendous importance to musicology - speaks in a voice that appears to have been prescribed by the material itself." Alan Bell, University of Calgary "I cannot think of any other book that is devoted to a single faculty of music. Compositional Crossroads offers a serious discussion of a period and place and the personalities that played an exceptional role in the development of Canadian contemporary music." Mary Ingraham, University of Alberta