Robert Schumann: Herald of a "new Poetic Age"

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Oxford University Press, 1997 - 607 páginas
Forced by a hand injury to abandon a career as a pianist, Robert Schumann went on to become one of the world's great composers. Among many works, his Spring Symphony (1841), Piano Concerto in A Minor (1841/1845), and the Third, or Rhenish, Symphony (1850) exemplify his infusion of classical forms with intense, personal emotion. His musical influence continues today and has inspired many other famous composers in the century since his death. Indeed Brahms, in a letter of January 1873, wrote: "The remembrance of Schumann is sacred to me. I will always take this noble pure artist as my model."
Now, in Robert Schumann: Herald of a "New Poetic Age," John Daverio presents the first comprehensive study of the composer's life and works to appear in nearly a century. Long regarded as a quintessentially romantic figure, Schumann also has been portrayed as a profoundly tragic one: a composer who began his career as a genius and ended it as a mere talent. Daverio takes issue with this Schumann myth, arguing instead that the composer's entire creative life was guided by the desire to imbue music with the intellectual substance of literature. A close analysis of the interdependence among Schumann's activities as reader, diarist, critic, and musician reveals the depth of his literary sensibility. Drawing on documents only recently brought to light, the author also provides a fresh outlook on the relationship between Schumann's mental illness--which brought on an extended sanitarium stay and eventual death in 1856--and his musical creativity. Schumann's character as man and artist thus emerges in all its complexity. The book concludes with an analysis of the late works and a postlude on Schumann's influence on successors from Brahms to Berg.
This well-researched study of Schumann interprets the composer's creative legacy in the context of his life and times, combining nineteenth-century cultural and intellectual history with a fascinating analysis of the works themselves.
 

Índice

Schumann Today
3
1 The Formation of a MusicoLiterary Sensibility
20
2 Music as Literature
55
3 Music Criticism in a New Key
105
4 Musical Love Letters in the Higher and Smaller Forms
131
5 Fierce Battles and Blissful Songs
182
1841
222
1842
242
10 The Musical Dramatist
329
11 Unbounded Creativity
388
12 The Final Phase
439
A Place to Recall Schumann and His Music
489
Translation of Jean Paul Flegeljahre Chapter 63 TitaniumBlack Tourmaline MaskedBall
493
Notes
503
Bibliography
571
General Index
595

1843
267
9 Schumanns New Way
285

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Sobre el autor (1997)

John Daverio is Associate Professor and Chairman of the Musicology Department at the Boston University School for the Arts. He is the author of Nineteenth-Century Music and the German Romantic Ideology, and has published on the music of Schumann, Brahms, and Wagner in a number of professional journals.

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