Ludwig Van Beethoven: Approaches to His Music

Voorkant
Clarendon Press, 1991 - 254 pagina's
Many books have been written about Beethoven but it is rare to find one which seeks an alternative to the tendency of academia, on the one hand, to fragmentation, and of popular biographical writing, on the other, to a superficial overview. In this volume, the late Carl Dahlhaus combines the interpretations of individual works with excursions into the musical aesthetics of the period around 1800, an age which was not only a `classical' period in the history of the arts but also one in which aesthetics carved itself a place in the centre of philosophical attention. The theme of the book is the reconstruction of Beethoven's `musical thinking' from the evidence in the works themselves and their context in the history of ideas. A table entitled `Chronicle' places the references to biographical data in their historical context. The selective bibliography includes comments to assist readers to find their way in the labyrinth of the literature about Beethoven.
 

Inhoudsopgave

Life and Work I
1
Inner Form and External Intention
10
Intitulata Bonaparte
19
The Aesthetic Subject and the Biographical Subject
30
Personal Style and the Individuality of Single Works
43
Ingenium and Witz
61
The Symphonic Style
67
Issues in Sonata Form
91
The Underlying Idea
143
The New Path
166
Fidelio
181
Church Music and the Religion of Art
194
Subthematicism
202
Late Works
219
Bibliography
238
Index
249

Theme and Character
121

Overige edities - Alles bekijken

Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen

Over de auteur (1991)

Carl Dahlhaus was a prolific author and one of the leading German musicologists in the field of 19th- and 20th-century music. He was also editor-in-chief of Richard Wagner's Gesamtausgabe.

Bibliografische gegevens