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  • Authors of Articles in this Issue

Candace Bailey is an Associate Professor at North Carolina Central University. Her research interests include seventeenth-century British music (Seventeenth-Century British Keyboard Sources, 2003) and nineteenth-century women's music in the American South. She is currently working on a book entitled Becoming Useful: Women and Music in the Antebellum and Civil War South.

J. P. E. Harper-Scott is a Lecturer in Music at Royal Holloway, University of London. He is the author of Edward Elgar, Modernist (Cambridge, 2006) and Elgar: An Extraordinary Life (London, 2007), and co-editor with Julian Rushton of Elgar Studies (Cambridge, 2007) and with Jim Samson of An Introduction to Music Studies (Cambridge, forthcoming). He has scholarly interests in early modernist and twentieth-century music, music theory and analysis, and the integration of twentieth-century Continental philosophy and ethical and hermeneutic concerns in music. He is writing a book on the complicated figure of the child in Britten.

Kerry McCarthy is Assistant Professor of Musicology at Duke University. Her first book, Liturgy and Contemplation in Byrd's Gradualia, was published by Routledge in 2007. Her current research interests include sixteenth-century contrafacta and the politics of exile among Elizabethan Catholic musicians.

Matthew Riley is Lecturer in Music at the University of Birmingham. He is the author of Musical Listening in the German Enlightenment (2004) and several articles on late eighteenth-century music aesthetics and theory.

James A. Winn is Professor of English at Boston University. His history of the relations between poetry and music, Unsuspected Eloquence (1981), remains the only general study of its kind. He is the author of John Dryden and his World (1987) and 'When Beauty Fires the Blood': Love and the Arts in the Age of Dryden (1992). Cambridge University Press will publish The Poetry of War in 2008. He is currently writing a cultural history of the reign of Queen Anne. [End Page 703]

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