Genealogies of Music and Memory: Gluck in the 19th-Century Parisian Imagination
Autor Mark Everisten Limba Engleză Hardback – 15 apr 2021
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197546000
ISBN-10: 0197546005
Pagini: 228
Ilustrații: 19
Dimensiuni: 236 x 155 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197546005
Pagini: 228
Ilustrații: 19
Dimensiuni: 236 x 155 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
A wide-ranging analysis ... Everist succeeds in expanding the scope of reception history.
Everist shows us that Gluck himself has sometimes been lost to the repertory, only to be found again, creating each time a new opportunity to reassert his interrupted claims on the operatic stage and the intimate emotions of the public.
Mark Everist has the enviable knack of discovering areas of research that enable him to rewrite history with greater accuracy, completeness, and nuance. The productions of Gluck's Orphée (1859) and Alceste (1861), with Pauline Viardot in both title-roles, are a reference point for most historians of Gluck reception since, and Everist's scrutiny of primary sources, while also tracking interest in other Gluck operas (notably Armide and Iphigénie en Tauride), shows the extent to which a combination star singer and composer, in 1859, was anticipated in concerts and criticism throughout the earlier nineteenth century.
In this path-breaking study, Mark Everist offers a fascinating and fine-grained account of the performance and appreciation of Gluck's music in nineteenth-century Paris. Drawing on his intimate knowledge of French musical life during this period, Everist documents an ongoing, variegated engagement with the composer's works, through concert performances, editions, and study, despite an almost complete lack of full, staged productions of the operas during the three decades preceding Pauline Viardot's landmark performance in Orphée et Euridice at the Théâtre-Lyrique in 1859, in a version arranged by Berlioz.
Everist shows us that Gluck himself has sometimes been lost to the repertory, only to be found again, creating each time a new opportunity to reassert his interrupted claims on the operatic stage and the intimate emotions of the public.
Mark Everist has the enviable knack of discovering areas of research that enable him to rewrite history with greater accuracy, completeness, and nuance. The productions of Gluck's Orphée (1859) and Alceste (1861), with Pauline Viardot in both title-roles, are a reference point for most historians of Gluck reception since, and Everist's scrutiny of primary sources, while also tracking interest in other Gluck operas (notably Armide and Iphigénie en Tauride), shows the extent to which a combination star singer and composer, in 1859, was anticipated in concerts and criticism throughout the earlier nineteenth century.
In this path-breaking study, Mark Everist offers a fascinating and fine-grained account of the performance and appreciation of Gluck's music in nineteenth-century Paris. Drawing on his intimate knowledge of French musical life during this period, Everist documents an ongoing, variegated engagement with the composer's works, through concert performances, editions, and study, despite an almost complete lack of full, staged productions of the operas during the three decades preceding Pauline Viardot's landmark performance in Orphée et Euridice at the Théâtre-Lyrique in 1859, in a version arranged by Berlioz.
Notă biografică
Mark Everist is a musicologist whose field of study includes the music of Western Europe, 1150-1350, music in France between the Restoration and Commune, Music and Cultural Transfer, and Mozart reception. He is Professor of Music at the University of Southampton and was President of the Royal Musical Association from 2011 to 2017.