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Studies of the genesis of musical, literary, and theatrical works.
Not only the final outcome but the process of creative endeavor has
long attracted attention in various artistic disciplines, but only
recently has the potential of such research been seriously
explored. The most rigorous basis for the study of artistic
creativity comes not from anecdotal or autobiographical reports,
but from original handwritten sketches and drafts and preliminary
studies, as well as from revised manuscripts and typescripts,
corrected proof sheets, and similar primary sources. The term
"genetic criticism" or "critique genetique" relates not to the
field of genetics, but to the genesis of works of art, as studied
in a broad and inclusive context. The essays inthis volume explore
aspects of genetic criticism in an interdisciplinary context,
emphasizing music, literature, and theater. A common thread
pertains to the essential continuity between a work and its
genesis. This volume bringstogether essays from leading scholars on
subjects ranging from biblical scholarship to Samuel Beckett, and
from Beethoven's Eroica Symphony to very recent musical
compositions. Contributors: Nicolas Donin, Daniel Ferrer, Alan
Gosman, R. B. Graves, Joseph E. Jones, William Kinderman,
Jean-Louis Lebrave, Lewis Lockwood, Geert Lernout, Peter McCallum,
Armine Kotin Mortimer, and James L. Zychowicz William Kinderman is
Professor of Musicology at the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign; Joseph E. Jones is visiting Assistant Professor
of Musicology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Marking the 250th anniversary of the composer's birth, this volume
presents twenty-one completely new essays on aspects of Beethoven's
personal life, his composing process, his manuscripts, and his
greatest works. Beethoven's music stands as a universal symbol of
personal and artistic achievement. As we reach and then surpass the
250th anniversary of the composer's birth, Jeremy Yudkin has
commissioned a collection of new essays from some of the most
insightful writers on Beethoven's accomplishments and brought them
together in this remarkable volume. Filled with careful
explanations, this book gives us completely new insights into music
known and loved by people around the world. Ordinary music lovers
as well as scholars will find countless new discoveries about
Beethoven and his music. Listeners will hear his compositions
afresh, and scholars will find new results of research and analysis
and new avenues for discovery. Topics include Beethoven's cultural
milieu, his personal life, his friends, his publishers, his
instruments, his working methods, his own handwritten scores, and,
of course, his music. Many works are carefully discussed and
explained in ways that reveal fascinating and previously unknown
aspects of compositions that we thought we knew well. A landmark
publication for all who admire some of the greatest music of our
civilization.
Beethoven's many surviving sketchbooks bear witness to the vast
creative labor that lay behind the musical masterpieces he left to
posterity. Among them, one of the most famous is the ""Eroica""
Sketchbook, containing all the known sketches for the ""Eroica""
Symphony, the ""Waldstein"" Sonata, and other works of 1803-04.
These include his first sketches for the opera Leonore (later
entitled Fidelio), as well as the unfinished opera Vestas Feuer,
the oratorio Christus am Oelberge, the Triple Concerto, songs,
keyboard compositions, and early sketches that later bore fruit in
the Fourth Piano Concerto and the Fifth and Sixth Symphonies. It
also contains ideas for works that were never completed. The
""Eroica"" Sketchbook is essentially a diary of Beethoven's
creative work during one of the great turning points in his career.
As such, this edition deepens our understanding of Beethoven's
creative process, and offers new insights into some of Beethoven's
most celebrated works. This edition makes available both a complete
facsimile and transcription of the sketchbook for the first time,
along with a detailed commentary on the origins, contents, and
significance of this vitally important source.
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