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The influential music theorist and composer Adolf Bernhard Marx
(1795-1866) spent much of his career as a professor of music in
Berlin and was a friend and mentor of Mendelssohn. He believed
music should be part of everyone's general education and lobbied
the Prussian government for a comprehensive national scheme for
musical education. His compositions included many songs and choral
works now largely forgotten, with the exception of the 1841
oratorio Mose. Among his publications is Gluck und die Oper (1863)
which is reissued in this series in both the German original and
English translation. His most famous and influential work, Die
Lehre von der musikalischen Komposition, was intended for the
students of the University of Berlin, setting out in simple terms
the principles of music theory and composition for the untrained.
This English translation, of only the first volume of the fourth
edition, was published in 1852.
Adolf Bernhard Marx (1795 1866) was an influential music theorist,
critic, composer and pedagogue. He believed that music should be
part of everyone's general education and lobbied the Prussian
government for a comprehensive national music-education scheme.
This English translation by George Macirone of Marx's 1839
Allgemeine Musiklehre was published in 1854 as the first work in
the series Novello's Library for the Diffusion of Musical
Knowledge. The series, described by the publisher as 'a collection
of standard treatises on the art of music written by the most
esteemed English and foreign masters', was devised in response to a
growing demand for training books and manuals to support domestic
music-making. It also included Berlioz's famous treatise on
instrumentation (also reissued in this series). Marx's work covers
the basic elements of music theory, musical instruments,
compositional techniques, forms of music, performance advice, and
the importance of musical education in general.
Adolf Bernhard Marx (1795-1866), the music critic and composer,
spent much of his career as professor of music in Berlin and was a
friend and mentor of Mendelssohn. His publications included an
influential textbook on composition and a biography of Beethoven.
The preface to this two-volume study, published in 1863, ranks
Gluck (1714-87) wtih Handel, Mozart and Beethoven at the pinnacle
of musical achievement. Marx describes Gluck's radical innovations
in operatic composition in the context of the wider European
tradition, and sets them in a chronological account of the
composer's life. Volume 1 covers Gluck's education, his early
successes in Italy and travels in Europe, and his prolific output
from 1750 to 1770, including the major, reformist works Orfeo,
Alceste, and Paride ed Elena, all premiered in Vienna. Marx
illustrates his analyses of plot, libretto and orchestration with
numerous music examples, and quotations from Gluck's writings.
Adolf Bernhard Marx (1795-1866), the music critic and composer,
spent much of his career as professor of music in Berlin and was a
friend and mentor of Mendelssohn. His publications included an
influential textbook on composition and a biography of Beethoven.
The preface to this two-volume study, published in 1863, ranks
Gluck (1714-87) wtih Handel, Mozart and Beethoven at the pinnacle
of musical achievement. Marx describes Gluck's radical innovations
in operatic composition in the context of the wider European
tradition, and sets them in a chronological account of the
composer's life. Volume 2 covers Gluck's later life, including his
residence in Paris during the 1770s, where he enjoyed the patronage
of Marie-Antoinette but encountered controversies and intrigues.
Marx discusses operas including Iphigenie en Aulide and Armide,
illustrating his analyses with music examples. The substantial
appendix contains longer music extracts, a facsimile manuscript
page, and an index of works.
A. B. Marx (1795-1866) was a scholar, teacher and critic of music,
for many years Professor of Music at the University of Berlin, and
a close friend - before a falling-out over the libretto of an
oratorio - of Mendelssohn. This influential book, published in
German in 1855 and translated into English in the same year,
consists of two parts: a survey of the significance of music to
western culture, and an impassioned and thought-provoking guide to
the necessary moral qualities, skills and understanding required to
teach - and to be taught - music. Marx's appreciation of such
composers as Mozart, Beethoven, Berlioz and Wagner is placed in a
context in which music is seen as a crucial moral influence on the
future development of mankind, and musicians therefore as playing a
vital role in that development.
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