Award: Shortlisted for the Katharine Briggs Award 2010 'In The Musical Ear Professor McLucas follows scholars like Albert Lord, John Blacking, and Christopher Small in the project of validating orally-transmitted "folk" and "popular" musical traditions in contrast to the "classical" traditions of Western art music transmitted in written notation. She goes beyond her predecessors first in addressing the impact of recorded sound on musical transmission, second in attempting to base her arguments on psychological and neurological research into musical memory and musical creation. It is an ambitious undertaking that sheds light not just on oral vs. written traditions but on human aptitudes, capacities and need for music in general.' John Spitzer, San Francisco Conservatory of Music, USA 'This book contains a magisterial compilation of all the ways in which non-notated (and in many cases non-notatable) activities lie at the heart of American music, past and present. It is enlivened by case studies and interviews with living musicians, and also by an ambitious juxtaposition of historical musicology, ethnomusicology, and psychology. ' John Sloboda, University of Keele, UK and Royal Holloway, University of London, UK ’Anne Dhu McLucas taps into a vast repertoire to illustrate the profound impact of the unwritten ... The accompanying CD enhances the reading of passages on both melody and neurons... academics won’t be the only ones harvesting titles from the glorious bibliography.’ 4 stars, Songlines '[McLucas] has produced an excellent introduction to this topic, which will be of great value to those studying all varieties of American music and those interested in the psychology of music.' Notes 'This book opens readers' eyes to the realization that oral traditions played (and still play) a vital role in American music's development, performance, and continuance.' Journal of Historical Research in Music Education 'This is a pioneering effort, one that in decad