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Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky remains to this day one of the
most-performed Russian composers. Based on recent studies and
source editions, this book demonstrates the close interrelationship
between Tchaikovsky's life and his work. The author portrays the
versatility of the musician who died at the mere age of 53 under
controversial circumstances in St. Petersburg. About the German
edition of this book: "[...] Constantin Floros devotes himself
initially to the biography and then to the compositional oeuvre,
divided according to genre and supplemented by concrete
illustrations, thus giving greater significance to the music."
(Forum Musikbibliothek 27, 2006) "[...] the music gets more weight
of its own in the more detailed analyses - illustrated with
revealing note citations - which yet always remain readily
accessible." (Steffen A. Schmidt, Das Orchester 02/2007)
With his extensive three-volume investigation, the author has newly
drawn the image of Gustav Mahler for our time. Should Mahler's
symphonies really be categorized as "absolute music"? -
Little-known manuscript sources contain significant hints to the
contrary: programmatic titles and catchwords or phrases, mottos,
literary allusions, associations, sighs, exclamations. Mahler fully
understood his symphonies as "erlebte Musik", music of experience,
as autobiography in notes, and as expressions of his
"weltanschauung". All the symphonies, including the purely
instrumental ones, can be traced back to programs that Mahler
originally made public, but suppressed later on. A knowledge of the
programmatic ideas provides access to a hitherto barely sensed
interior metaphysical world that is of crucial importance for an
adequate interpretation of the works. This first volume uncovers
the complexity of relations between Mahler's wide-ranging reading
and education, his aesthetics and his symphonic creation. About the
German edition of this book: "One of the most thoroughgoing and
comprehensive investigations of Gustav Mahler's work and world to
date." (Norddeutscher Rundfunk) "The way in which Mahler's literary
background, his education, and his aesthetic and philosophical
maxims are presented here indeed opens up a new approach." (Die
Musikforschung)
The subject of this book is the semantics of symphonic music from
Beethoven to Mahler. Of fundamental importance is the realization
that this music is imbued with non-musical, literary, philosophical
and religious ideas. It is also clear that not only Beethoven,
Schubert and Bruckner were crucial role models for Mahler, but also
the musical dramatist Wagner and the programmatic symphony
composers Berlioz and Liszt. At the same time a semantic musical
analysis of their works reveals for the first time the actual
inherent (poetic) quintessence of numerous orchestral works of the
19th Century.
While unappreciated and controversial during most of his life,
Anton Bruckner is today regarded as the greatest symphonist between
Beethoven and Gustav Mahler - in terms of originality, boldness and
monumentality of his music. The image of Bruckner the man, however,
is still extreme instance of the tenacious power of prejudice. No
less a figure than Gustav Mahler coined the apercu about Bruckner
being "a simpleton - half genius, half imbecile". The author is out
to correct that misperception. His thesis in this study is that
contrary to what has hitherto been asserted, there is an intimate
relation between Bruckner's sacred music and his symphonies from
multiple perspectives: biographical data, sources and influences,
the psychology of creation, musical structure, contemporary
testimony and reception history. Additional chapters assess
important Bruckner recordings and interpreters and the
progressiveness of his music.
Music is often defined as art for the ear, as the language of
feeling, of the heart, as sound play, or as the science of
composition. But music also conveys intellectual and emotional
experiences, literary, religious, philosophical, social and
political ideas. Countless composers encrypt contents in their
music that can be deciphered by a variety of methods. This book is
designed as an introduction to the basic questions of musical
semantics and discusses Beethoven's committed art, the core ideas
of the "Ring of the Nibelung" and of the "Symphony of a Thousand",
Wagner's idea of a religion of art, the relation of music and
poetry, the musico-literary conceptions of composers, the large
field of program music and the history of the impact of Gustav
Mahler.
In the last third of the 19th century Brahms and Bruckner were
regarded as antipodes. Is this perception really true to the
historical reality or had their contemporaries overestimated the
"dimension of their distance", as argued later? Both wrote
autonomously conceived music, both held on to traditional forms,
and both rejected program music. To find an answer to this
question, part I tries to elucidate Brahms' relation to Bruckner in
its biographic, historical, artistic and art-theoretical aspects.
At the center of the second part, whose subject is Brahms' early
work, is the question whether Brahms was indeed an autonomously
working composer. The topic of the third part is a taboo of
Bruckner research: Bruckner's relation to program music. "The
second and third part of the study achieve new insights. With a
consistent analysis of biographic data and, simultaneously, a
careful scrutiny of musical facts (increased experience in
assessing the music of the 19th century), Floros gains convincing
interpretations." (Friedrich Heller about the German edition of the
book) "The book is the result of Floros's intensive study of
Mahler, during which he found hitherto undiscovered clues to the
interpretation of Brahms's and Bruckner's work. Most of the
borrowings discussed confirm differences between the two composers
in both ideologies and musical heritage. Long thought to be
'absolute' music, Bruckner's compositions carry significant
semantic meaning when the composer desired." (Musical Borrowing)
This monograph is an authoritative study of the oeuvre of one of
the most important composers of our time. For the first time,
Ligeti's key works are presented in the context of their drafts and
sketches. His personal and artistic development is set forth and
illuminated, and his principal compositions are analyzed and
reinterpreted, based on detailed studies of the scores and drafts,
as well as on personal conversations with the composer. In
addition, numerous questions concerning today's composing are
raised and discussed. Music does not have to be puristic: Ligeti's
spheres of interest are close to universal, embracing history,
natural science, and visual arts, as well as music of diverse eras
and ethnicities. This expanded world of the musical comprises not
just tones and sounds, speech and music, the vocal and the
instrumental: Ligeti conceives music as a cosmos of acoustic form.
The central point of this book is the realization that the creative
work of Alban Berg, which in recent years has moved to the
forefront of scholarly interest, is largely rooted in
autobiography, so that therefore one can gain access to the music
by studying the inner biography of its creator. Accordingly, the
first of the three parts of this volume outlines a character
portrait of this great composer. Part two considers the conditions
relevant to a deeper understanding of Berg and of the Second
Viennese School generally. In part three, then, Berg's key works
will be analyzed and semantically deciphered in terms of his inner
biography. The study is based not only on the sources in print but
also on the rich unpublished material. Alban Berg was incapable of
composing without a program. He needed an extra-musical stimulus.
With him, personal experience was the indispensable condition of
the creative process: the autobiographic reference was
all-important for composing.
With this study the author "opened up a previously locked door of
Beethoven research" (Martin Geck). The book presents conclusive
answers to questions that had occupied critics for more than a
century. It makes clear what exactly Beethoven and his
contemporaries meant by the term "heroic". It proves that the
"heroic-allegorical ballet" The Creatures of Prometheus is a key
work for an understanding of the Eroica, and shows that Beethoven
associated the First Consul of the French Republic, Napoleon
Bonaparte, with the mythical figure of the Titan Prometheus. The
book draws on interdisciplinary researches in the areas of Greek
Mythology, Napoleonic History and Comparative Literature.
Gustav Mahler thought of his symphonic writing as being based on
personal experience, as autobiographical, and as an expression of
his philosophy of life. Thus his symphonies deal with profound
existential questions and with programmatic ideas that the composer
was at first willing to reveal but later preferred to keep to
himself. Important references to musical meaning in Mahler's
symphonies can be found in numerous sources - sketches, drafts,
autograph scores, and printers' proofs. These references take the
form of programmatic titles, cues, and mottos, and include literary
allusions, outcries of grief, and other emotional expressions; they
demonstrate that his symphonies cannot be classified as absolute
music but rather as music with personal, biographical, literary,
and philosophical meanings. With this thesis in mind, Constantin
Floros undertakes a precise and detailed exploration of each of
Mahler's ten symphonies and Das Lied von der Erde, bringing to
light for the first time various aspects of the works. Professor
Floros examines their history and autobiographical origins and
discusses the events that profoundly influenced the composer's
symphonic writing. For example, Mahler's meeting with Alma
Schindler (later to become Alma Mahler) in November 1901 and the
tragic events of 1907 - the death of the composer's older daughter
and the diagnosis of his heart trouble - profoundly changed
Mahler's attitude toward life and subsequently his music. The
compositional techniques employed by Mahler in each symphony are
analyzed and related to stylistic and semantic aspects to decode
the composer's symbolic musical language. The author is thus able
to identify certain basic qualities ofthese works: tragic irony,
the sense of the grotesque, and the affirmation of Mahler's belief
both in life after death and in the power of love to transcend
death. Understanding this language leads to a more profound
understanding of Mahler the symphonist. Gustav Mahler: The
Symphonies is the third book in Professor Floros' monumental study
of Mahler, his spiritual world, and his position in relation to
nineteenth-century symphonic writing in general. The first and
second books have not yet been translated into English.
With the terms "visionary" and "despot", the author seeks to
circumscribe the multilayered personality of Gustav Mahler. Opening
up a terra incognita, he draws a comprehensive map of the various
aspects of Mahler's inner biography: his unshakable belief in the
"sacredness of musical art" and strongly developed sense of
mission, his double life as conductor and composer, his
inexorability and refusal to compromise vis-a-vis himself and
others, his discomfort with the world in which he lived, the
complex facets of his psyche and his enormous energy potential. The
result is the disclosure of new and unexpected connections between
Mahler's personality and his oeuvre.
To grasp music in its depth dimension is an art that can be learned
and perfected. Categories of formal analysis here play a
subordinate role - at least as important it is to be consciously
aware of timbres, dynamic processes, musical characters and
expressions. Following general reflections about the art of
listening, the volume in hand presents exemplary work analyses. The
roster of composers introduced extends from Mozart to Bernstein,
that of the genres discussed from the piano piece to the opera. A
detailed register and a survey of the chief works referred to make
this book an indispensable companion for both scholars and laymen.
About the German edition of this book: "In Floros' book all these
details unite to form a magnificent mosaic. Individual works
discussed meet us in an entirely new light, and we begin to
decipher the language of music with a different set of tools."
(Helmut Peters)
The present autobiography sets out from the contrast between
"establishment" and "outsiders" in science and scholarship. It
portrays a number of prominent composers, conductors and
musicologists and seeks to illuminate the nature of the phenomenon
of music from diverse vantage points, centering on cultural,
biographic, psychological, philosophic, critical, aesthetic and
axiological questions. Lutz Lesle (Das Orchester, 2018): At the
price of being deemed an outsider, Floros has devoted a major part
of his life's work to the semantic dimension of music, from the
Viennese Classics to Postmodernism. His endeavor has been to
preserve for music the dignity of manifold meaning that the school
of bean counters were stripping from it by reducing musical scores
to structure-analytical databases. "To simply ignore the spiritual
depth dimension of important musical art works," the author bluntly
proclaims, "and to limit oneself to the investigation of the 'tonal
body': to me there is no greater aberration."
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