"In his autobiographical "Notes of a Pianist," nineteenth-century
New Orleans piano virtuoso and composer Louis Moreau Gottschalk
shares with us his impressions as he travels through North and
South America. His concert schedule and the number of cities he
visits in a year during the age of locomotive and steamship would
be daunting to even the most travel-hardened jet-age road warrior.
Whether at a railroad siding worrying about the fate of his
precious Chickering concert grand pianos before the Civil War
battle of Gettysburg, fleeing San Francisco for South America
because of a concocted scandal, or tending the wounded during the
revolution in Lima, Peru, Gottschalk puts the reader in the middle
of the action. His writing style is like his music--bold, colorful,
romantic, virtuosic, and dramatic."--Lambert Orkis, Grammy
Award-winning pianist
"Having grown up in opera-mad New Orleans in a household in
which Creole tunes were probably common currency, Louis Moreau
Gottschalk, after finishing school in Paris, gave free rein to his
captivating and spontaneous fantasy and melodic charm. As Frederick
Starr convincingly shows, his music was brilliant and original. And
it leaves, when sympathetically presented, an indelible impression
of his genius."--Lawrence Gushee, University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign, author of "Pioneers of Jazz: The Story of the
Creole Band"
"Over and above all [the] purely sensuous aspects of
[Gottschalk's] pianism . . . Was the presence of a genuinely
musical soul. This was what most commanded the admiration of his
friend and mentor Hector Berlioz: his musicianship, his taste, and
his fine sense of proportion."--From the editor's Prelude
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