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The fascinating correspondence of the Berlin lawyer and musician
Christian Gottfried Krause is an important document reflecting the
trends and developments in aesthetics, music theory and music
making in the Prussian capital during the reign of Frederick the
Great. Krause's letters shed light on the rise of a bourgeois music
culture, which during his lifetime gradually replaced the
traditional musical institutions at court and in the churches,
preparing the urban musical culture which to this day dominates
German socio-cultural structures. This volume features Krause's
letters to leading literary figures of his time, including Johann
Wilhelm Ludwig Gleim, Carl Wilhelm Ramler, Ewald Christian von
Kleist, and Johann Peter Uz. The letters provide importand
information not found in other sources about musical performances,
and express Krause's strong opinions about leading German musicians
with whom he was acquainted, such as Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach,
Georg Philipp Telemann, Carl Heinrich Graun, and Johann Friedrich
Agricola. The letters provide news about the Berlin opera and
gossip about the Prussian court as well as containing Krause's
response to the Seven Years' War and his perception of the horrors
- and benefits - of war in general. The correspondence vividly
portrays the concern of a middle-class Prussian for the health and
welfare of his family of six, in the very period when the Prussian
middle class was beginning to come into its own. And - particularly
in the exchanges with the lonely Gleim - the letters reveal a
remarkable sympathy between this family man and a man without a
family. They are presented in the original German, with English
translations on facing pages. An introduction and abundant
annotations help to reveal a picture of a pivotal cultural moment
and will be of interest to anyone working on the roots of urban
musical culture and the culture of the mid-eighteenth century in
general.
The fascinating correspondence of the Berlin lawyer and musician
Christian Gottfried Krause is an important document reflecting the
trends and developments in aesthetics, music theory and music
making in the Prussian capital during the reign of Frederick the
Great. Krause's letters shed light on the rise of a bourgeois music
culture, which during his lifetime gradually replaced the
traditional musical institutions at court and in the churches,
preparing the urban musical culture which to this day dominates
German socio-cultural structures. This volume features Krause's
letters to leading literary figures of his time, including Johann
Wilhelm Ludwig Gleim, Carl Wilhelm Ramler, Ewald Christian von
Kleist, and Johann Peter Uz. The letters provide importand
information not found in other sources about musical performances,
and express Krause's strong opinions about leading German musicians
with whom he was acquainted, such as Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach,
Georg Philipp Telemann, Carl Heinrich Graun, and Johann Friedrich
Agricola. The letters provide news about the Berlin opera and
gossip about the Prussian court as well as containing Krause's
response to the Seven Years' War and his perception of the horrors
- and benefits - of war in general. The correspondence vividly
portrays the concern of a middle-class Prussian for the health and
welfare of his family of six, in the very period when the Prussian
middle class was beginning to come into its own. And - particularly
in the exchanges with the lonely Gleim - the letters reveal a
remarkable sympathy between this family man and a man without a
family. They are presented in the original German, with English
translations on facing pages. An introduction and abundant
annotations help to reveal a picture of a pivotal cultural moment
and will be of interest to anyone working on the roots of urban
musical culture and the culture of the mid-eighteenth century in
general.
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