Powers was known for intensive study of both Renaissance music and music theory and several world music traditions (especially Indian music); this allowed him to reevaluate the concept of mode.[3] He did this in a number of articles, including “Mode” in the New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (1980),[4] a landmark of scholarship on the subject, "Tonal types and modal categories in Renaissance polyphony" (1981),[5] "Modal representations in polyphonic offertories" [based mostly on Palestrina's Offertoria cycle] (1982),[6] "Is mode real?" (1992),[7] "Anomalous modalities" (1996),[8] “Language Models and Musical Analysis,”[9] and “Puccini’s Turandot: The End of the Great Tradition,”[10]
The Harold Powers World Travel Fund, administered by the American Musicological Society, was established in 2006 to “encourage and assist Ph.D. candidates, post-docs, and junior faculty in all fields of musical scholarship to travel anywhere in the world to carry out the necessary work for their dissertation or other research. The Fund honors the polymathic scholar and distinguished longtime AMS member whose publications have ranged from music and language to medieval mode to Indian music to Puccini and whose interests are wider still, but always with the communicative aspects of music at their base.”[12]
Books
The Background of the South Indian Rāga-System (dissertation, Princeton U., 1959)
(ed.) Studies in Music History: Essays for Oliver Strunk (Princeton, NJ, 1968)
William Ashbrook and Harold Powers, "Puccini's Turandot: The End of the Great Tradition" (Princeton, NJ, 1991)
References
^Morgan, Paula (30 October 2007). "Powers, Harold S."Grove. Oxford Music Online.
^Kerman, Joseph. Contemplating Music. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1985.
^Powers, Harold Stone (January 29, 2004). Sadie, Stanely; Tyrrell, John (eds.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN0195170679.
^Journal of the American Musicological Society XXXIV (1981), pp.428-70.