Description

Book Synopsis
For nearly forty years, Hector Berlioz combined writing music with lively and informed music criticism. This collection of articles, engagingly translated by Roger Nichols, covers the middle years of his critical career.Berlioz's music criticism from 1837 to 1850 covers a period when he composed some of his finest works, and travelled abroad to perform them before appreciative audiences in Germany, Russia, and England. Roger Nichols has chosen and translated extracts from fifty-eight articles of particular interest, with commentary and notes identifying people mentioned. The articles are preceded by a richly informative introduction by the Berlioz scholar Peter Bloom. Additional editorial notes are provided by musicologist Julian Rushton. In the selected articles Berlioz discusses Paris performances of early and modern music, including new operas and revivals, and concerts at the Paris Conservatoire. He comments freely but with understanding on conductors, singers and instrumentalists. The essays demonstrate the composer's concern with innovation in the design of musical instruments and assess the quality of performing venues. Berlioz writes on the musical life of London, France, and Germany, most entertainingly about the inauguration of statues of Beethoven and Rossini. The selection is framed by major articles on "Imitation in Music" and on Gluck's opera Alceste.

Berlioz the Critic

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    A Hardback by Julian Rushton


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      Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Ltd
      Publication Date: 6/10/2025
      ISBN13: 9781648250736, 978-1648250736
      ISBN10: 1648250734
      Also in:
      Music

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      For nearly forty years, Hector Berlioz combined writing music with lively and informed music criticism. This collection of articles, engagingly translated by Roger Nichols, covers the middle years of his critical career.Berlioz's music criticism from 1837 to 1850 covers a period when he composed some of his finest works, and travelled abroad to perform them before appreciative audiences in Germany, Russia, and England. Roger Nichols has chosen and translated extracts from fifty-eight articles of particular interest, with commentary and notes identifying people mentioned. The articles are preceded by a richly informative introduction by the Berlioz scholar Peter Bloom. Additional editorial notes are provided by musicologist Julian Rushton. In the selected articles Berlioz discusses Paris performances of early and modern music, including new operas and revivals, and concerts at the Paris Conservatoire. He comments freely but with understanding on conductors, singers and instrumentalists. The essays demonstrate the composer's concern with innovation in the design of musical instruments and assess the quality of performing venues. Berlioz writes on the musical life of London, France, and Germany, most entertainingly about the inauguration of statues of Beethoven and Rossini. The selection is framed by major articles on "Imitation in Music" and on Gluck's opera Alceste.

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