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Bettina Varwig places the music of the celebrated Dresden composer
Heinrich Schutz in a richly detailed tapestry of cultural,
political, religious and intellectual contexts. Four key events in
Schutz's career - the 1617 Reformation centenary, the performance
of his Dafne in 1627, the 1636 funeral composition Musikalische
Exequien and the publication of his motet collection Geistliche
Chormusik (1648) - are used to explore his music's resonances with
broader historical themes, including the effects of the Thirty
Years' War, contemporary meanings of classical mythology, Lutheran
attitudes to death and the afterlife as well as shifting
conceptions of time and history in light of early modern scientific
advances. These original seventeenth-century circumstances are
treated in counterpoint with Schutz's fascinating later reinvention
in nineteenth- and twentieth-century German musical culture,
providing a new kind of musicological writing that interweaves
layers of historical inquiry from the seventeenth century to the
present day.
A corporeal history of music-making in early modern Europe. Music
in the Flesh reimagines the lived experiences of music-making
subjects—composers, performers, listeners—in the long
seventeenth century. There are countless historical testimonies of
the powerful effects of music upon the early modern body; it is
described as moving, ravishing, painful, dangerous, curative, and
miraculous while affecting “the circulation of the humors, the
purification of the blood, the dilation of the vessels and
pores.” How were these early modern European bodies constituted
that music generated such potent bodily-spiritual effects? Bettina
Varwig argues that early modern music-making practices challenge
our modern understanding of human nature as a mind-body dichotomy.
Instead, they persistently affirm a more integrated anthropology,
in which body, soul, and spirit remain inextricably entangled.
Moving with ease across repertories and regions, sacred and
vernacular musics, and domestic and public settings, Varwig
sketches a “musical physiology” that is as historically
illuminating as it is relevant for present-day performance. This
book makes a significant contribution not just to the history of
music, but also to the history of the body, the senses, and the
emotions, revealing music as a unique access point for reimagining
early modern modes of being-in-the-world.
Johann Sebastian Bach has loomed large in the imagination of
scholars, performers, and audiences since the late nineteenth
century.This new book, edited by veteran Bach scholar Bettina
Varwig, gathers a diverse group of leading and emerging Bach
researchers as well as a number of contributors from beyond the
core of Bach studies. The book's fourteen chapters engage in active
'rethinking' of different topics connected with Bach; the iconic
name which broadly encompasses the historical individual, the
sounds and afterlives of his music, as well as all that those four
letters came to stand for in the later popular and scholarly
imagination. In turn, challenging the fundamental assumptions about
the nineteenth-century Bach revival, the rise of the modern work
concept, Bach's music as a code, and about editions of his music as
monuments. Collectively, these contributions thus take apart,
scrutinize, dust off and reassemble some of our most cherished
narratives and deeply held beliefs about Bach and his music. In
doing so, they open multiple pathways towards exciting future
modesof engagement with the composer and his legacy.
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