Words On Music: From Addison To Barzun
For centuries, distinguished writers have taken on the challenge of describing great music and its significance in their lives. From Joseph Addison to Virgil Thomson, writers in and out of the music field have used their most vivid language to conjure the sounds and emotions of the music that mattered most to them. Yet until this book, no single volume has ever collected the best of this writing in one place. Scattered in magazines, essay collections, and program notes, this literature is largely unknown to the general reader—who often thinks that music essays are for musicians only—and even to the musician—who often reads only narrow specialty publications.

Words on Music is thus the first book of its kind. Covering instrumental and vocal music from the eighteenth through the twentieth centuries, it features essays distinguished by their literary quality, their readability, and their appeal to a wide audience. Included is writing by novelists, essayists, composers, performers, cultural historians, and others who have written about music with precision and passion.

Here is George Bernard Shaw on Handel, Albert Schweitzer on Bach, Glenn Gould on Scarlatti, E. T. A. Hoffman on Beethoven, Heinrich Heine on Rossini, Aaron Copland on Mozart, George Eliot on Wagner, G. K. Chesterton on Gilbert and Sullivan, Leonard Bernstein on Mahler, Guy Davenport on Ives, Pierre Boulez on Stravinsky, Ned Rorem on Ravel, and more than fifty others. Here also are essays on broader topics—Joseph Addison on opera, Anthony Burgess on music and literature, Jacques Barzun on music criticism, H. L. Mencken on “Music an Sin”—as well as musical memoirs by such masters of the genre as Hector Berlioz, Leigh Hunt, and Ethel Smyth.

Words on Music is a uniquely literary and readable book on music. With its wide range of tones and voices, it is ideal for the general reader, the humanities educator, and the musical specialist. Each article is introduced by an informative headnote on the writer and subject. In addition, the volume offers a bibliography with valuable clues for further reading and a substantial essay introducing the elusive art of writing about music.
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Words On Music: From Addison To Barzun
For centuries, distinguished writers have taken on the challenge of describing great music and its significance in their lives. From Joseph Addison to Virgil Thomson, writers in and out of the music field have used their most vivid language to conjure the sounds and emotions of the music that mattered most to them. Yet until this book, no single volume has ever collected the best of this writing in one place. Scattered in magazines, essay collections, and program notes, this literature is largely unknown to the general reader—who often thinks that music essays are for musicians only—and even to the musician—who often reads only narrow specialty publications.

Words on Music is thus the first book of its kind. Covering instrumental and vocal music from the eighteenth through the twentieth centuries, it features essays distinguished by their literary quality, their readability, and their appeal to a wide audience. Included is writing by novelists, essayists, composers, performers, cultural historians, and others who have written about music with precision and passion.

Here is George Bernard Shaw on Handel, Albert Schweitzer on Bach, Glenn Gould on Scarlatti, E. T. A. Hoffman on Beethoven, Heinrich Heine on Rossini, Aaron Copland on Mozart, George Eliot on Wagner, G. K. Chesterton on Gilbert and Sullivan, Leonard Bernstein on Mahler, Guy Davenport on Ives, Pierre Boulez on Stravinsky, Ned Rorem on Ravel, and more than fifty others. Here also are essays on broader topics—Joseph Addison on opera, Anthony Burgess on music and literature, Jacques Barzun on music criticism, H. L. Mencken on “Music an Sin”—as well as musical memoirs by such masters of the genre as Hector Berlioz, Leigh Hunt, and Ethel Smyth.

Words on Music is a uniquely literary and readable book on music. With its wide range of tones and voices, it is ideal for the general reader, the humanities educator, and the musical specialist. Each article is introduced by an informative headnote on the writer and subject. In addition, the volume offers a bibliography with valuable clues for further reading and a substantial essay introducing the elusive art of writing about music.
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Words On Music: From Addison To Barzun

Words On Music: From Addison To Barzun

by Jack Sullivan
Words On Music: From Addison To Barzun

Words On Music: From Addison To Barzun

by Jack Sullivan

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Overview

For centuries, distinguished writers have taken on the challenge of describing great music and its significance in their lives. From Joseph Addison to Virgil Thomson, writers in and out of the music field have used their most vivid language to conjure the sounds and emotions of the music that mattered most to them. Yet until this book, no single volume has ever collected the best of this writing in one place. Scattered in magazines, essay collections, and program notes, this literature is largely unknown to the general reader—who often thinks that music essays are for musicians only—and even to the musician—who often reads only narrow specialty publications.

Words on Music is thus the first book of its kind. Covering instrumental and vocal music from the eighteenth through the twentieth centuries, it features essays distinguished by their literary quality, their readability, and their appeal to a wide audience. Included is writing by novelists, essayists, composers, performers, cultural historians, and others who have written about music with precision and passion.

Here is George Bernard Shaw on Handel, Albert Schweitzer on Bach, Glenn Gould on Scarlatti, E. T. A. Hoffman on Beethoven, Heinrich Heine on Rossini, Aaron Copland on Mozart, George Eliot on Wagner, G. K. Chesterton on Gilbert and Sullivan, Leonard Bernstein on Mahler, Guy Davenport on Ives, Pierre Boulez on Stravinsky, Ned Rorem on Ravel, and more than fifty others. Here also are essays on broader topics—Joseph Addison on opera, Anthony Burgess on music and literature, Jacques Barzun on music criticism, H. L. Mencken on “Music an Sin”—as well as musical memoirs by such masters of the genre as Hector Berlioz, Leigh Hunt, and Ethel Smyth.

Words on Music is a uniquely literary and readable book on music. With its wide range of tones and voices, it is ideal for the general reader, the humanities educator, and the musical specialist. Each article is introduced by an informative headnote on the writer and subject. In addition, the volume offers a bibliography with valuable clues for further reading and a substantial essay introducing the elusive art of writing about music.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780821409596
Publisher: Ohio University Press
Publication date: 06/30/1990
Edition description: 1
Pages: 456
Product dimensions: (w) x (h) x 1.90(d)

Table of Contents

Prefacexi
Acknowledgmentsxiv
Permissionsxv
IWriting about Music
The Elusive Art3
Music into Words14
Three Diatribes32
IIComposers and Masterworks
The Miracle of Gregorian Chant, The Fatal Perfection of Palestrina41
Purcell, England's Master46
The Roots of Bach's Art, Bach's Tone Paintings, Bach's Brandenburgs55
Bach the Colorist63
The Capaciousness of Handel66
A Messiah for Heathens76
Scarlatti's Keyboard Quirks80
The Enchantment of Rameau82
The Clarity of Haydn85
At the Thought of Mozart90
Mozart's Noisy Ghost93
The Erotic Mozart99
Mozart's Operas, Beethoven's Fidelio104
Haydn, Beethoven, and Mozart107
Weber and the Fantastic, Beethoven's Despair111
Beethoven and the Sublime116
Beethoven: A Revelation from Another World123
On the Beethoven Ninth131
Rossini and Meyerbeer139
Schubert: Music's Great Heart149
On Discovering Schubert's Last Symphony154
Schubert's C-Major Quintet: Two Variations160
Donizetti's Operas166
Berlioz the Revolutionary173
Schumann the Lyricist191
On Chopin's Piano Music193
Literature in Liszt's Mind and Work206
The Significance of Wagner224
Music and Words in Wagner227
The Overture to Die Meistersinger, Wagner Versus Bizet236
The Brahms "Eroica"241
Moussorgsky's Vision of Childhood245
Tchaikovsky: A Modern Music Lord, Richard Strauss and Nietzsche247
Italian Opera of Today256
Gilbert and Sullivan262
Mahler: His Time Has Come267
Debussy and the Dawn of Modernism, Webern's Rarified Beauty, Stravinsky's Sacre: the Cornerstone of Modern Music273
Struggling With Schonberg, Scriabine the Visionary282
Sibelius and the Music of the Future289
Ives the Master294
Notes on Ravel299
Varese, Skyscraper Mystic306
Contemporary Voyages: Benjamin Britten, Elliott Carter, Pierre Boulez311
IIIThe Art of Music
Music as Science and Sentiment333
The Condition of Music338
Opera and Realism342
The Recording Angel349
A Matter of Time and Space355
Music and Sin359
Why Opera?362
IVMemoirs and Portraits
The Damnation of Faust: From Triumph to Ruin, On Hearing Beethoven's C-Sharp Minor Quartet371
A Ramble among the Musicians of Germany379
Paganini387
Berlioz, Liszt, Chopin391
Memories of Great Composers396
Memories of Great Performers406
Conversations With Arrau411
Perfect Pitch415
The Religion of the Pianoforte421
Suggestions for Further Reading435
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