Listing 1 - 4 of 4 |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Choose an application
Choose an application
Rosa Harriet Newmarch [1857-1940] was well-known in her lifetime as the leading British authority on Russian music, yet she also enjoyed a long and close friendship with the Finnish composer, Jean Sibelius [1865-1957]. This edition traces a personal and professional relationship that lasted more than three decades, as documented in more than 130 letters, notes and telegrams currently held in the National Archives of Finland. The correspondence, conducted in a mixture of French and German, reveals the intense friendship between Sibelius and Newmarch, sheds detailed light on Newmarch's contribution to the development of musical life in Britain, and provides some of Sibelius's most intimate commentary on his own works, as well as on those of other composers. This edition contains the complete extant correspondence between Newmarch and Sibelius in English translation, complemented by comprehensive commentaries on the events and personalities referred to, and is prefaced by an extensive introduction outlining Newmarch's definitive role in promoting Sibelius and his music in early twentieth-century Britain. An appendix reproduces a previously unknown programme note that Newmarch wrote for the first British performance of Sibelius's Fourth Symphony. The book's translation and publication of the letters in English is complemented by the letters' online availability in their original language. PHILIP ROSS BULLOCK is University Lecturer in Russian at the University of Oxford, and Tutor and Fellow at Wadham College, Oxford.
Composers --- Songwriters --- Musicians --- Sibelius, Jean, --- Newmarch, Rosa, --- Newmarch, R. --- Jeaffreson, Rosa, --- Sibelius, I︠A︡. --- Sibelius, I︠A︡n, --- Sibelius, J. --- Sibelius, Jan, --- Sibelius, Jean --- Sibelius, Jean Julius Christian, --- Sibelius, Johan Julius Christian, --- Сибелиус, Ян,
Choose an application
Hermann Deiters (1833-1907) first met Brahms in 1856, and became an enthusiastic supporter of his work. This 'biographical sketch' was published in English in 1888, edited by J. A. Fuller Maitland, the English musicologist whose Schumann in the Novello 'Great Musicians' series and Masters of German Music are also reissued in this series. Brahms was still alive and composing at this time: the book consists of a short account of his life followed by a critical review of all his works up to 1887. The preface states: 'That Johannes Brahms is by far the greatest composer of our time ... will not be contested by any musician whose claim to an opinion is based on an exhaustive knowledge of his works. Brahms has a place in the line of supreme masters in the craft of music, that line which stretches down without interruption through Palestrina, from a far earlier time.'
Composers --- Brahms, Johannes, --- Brahms, Johannes --- Brahms, J. --- Brahms, Joh. --- Brams, I. --- Brams, Iogannes, --- Brams, Ĭokhanes, --- Burāmusu, J., --- Marks, G. W.
Listing 1 - 4 of 4 |
Sort by
|