While no one would dispute Wagner's ranking among the most
significant composers in the history of Western music, his works
have been more fiercely attacked than those of any other composer.
Alleged to be an unscrupulous womanizer and megalomaniac,
undeniably a racist, Wagner's personal qualities and attitudes have
often provoked, and continue to provoke, intense hostility that has
translated into a mistrust and abhorrence of his music.
In this emphatic, lucid book, Michael Tanner discusses why
people feel so passionately about Wagner, for or against, in a way
that they do not about other artists who had personal traits no
less lamentable than those he is thought to have possessed. Tanner
lays out the various arguments made by Wagner's detractors and
admirers, and challenges most of them. The author's fascination for
the relationships among music, text, and plot generates an
illuminating discussion of the operas, in which he persuades us to
see many of Wagner's best-known works anew--"The Ring Cycle,
Tristan und Isolde, Parsifal." He refrains from lengthy and
detailed musical examination, giving instead passionate and
unconventional analyses that are accessible to all lovers of music,
be they listeners or performers.
In this fiery reassessment of one of the greatest composers in
the history of opera, Tanner presents one of the most intelligent
and controversial portraits of Wagner to emerge for many years.
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