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The Suburbans (Hardcover)
Henry Fothergill Chorley, Felicia Dorothea Browne Hemans, Thomas William Hodgson Crosland
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R843
Discovery Miles 8 430
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Henry Fothergill Chorley made his name as music journalist for The
Athanaeum from 1830 until his retirement in 1868. He published
weekly reviews of concerts as well as gossip on musicians and
composers of the day. This book is based on four lectures presented
by the author at the Royal Institution in 1862, and edited after
his death by Henry Hewlett. It outlines the development of the
different traditions and cultures of music across the world and how
western classical composers were inspired and influenced by them.
It contains many musical illustrations, drawn particularly from the
eighteenth and nineteenth centuries (for example, the fashionable
so-called 'Turkish' music by composers including Mozart and
Rossini). The book, though idiosyncratic and full of sweeping
generalisations, conveys the spirit of its time and the lively
character of its author. It will appeal to all those interested in
the Victorian reception of world music.
Thirty Years' Musical Recollections, first published in 1862, is a
year-by-year commentary in two volumes on the European operas,
ballets, singers and dancers popular in London from 1830 to 1859.
Its author was music critic of The Athaneum for over thirty years
and also wrote book reviews, novels, plays and poems. Volume 2
covers the period 1847-1859 and serves as a valuable reference work
to the musical life of London during these years. It begins with an
account of the deterioration of Her Majesty's Theatre and the
opening of the Royal Italian Opera. Chorley intersperses discerning
observations about the changing trends in public taste with
descriptions of famous opera singers - including Mademoiselle
Alboni, Signor Ronconi, the Countess Rossi, Madame Ristori and
Madame Pauline Viardot - and highlights their more noteworthy
performances. The book is an entertaining eyewitness account of the
lively musical scene in mid-nineteenth-century London.
Henry Fothergill Chorley was music critic of The Athenaeum for over
thirty years. This three-volume book, published in 1841, originated
in a journal written by Chorley while travelling in Europe. His aim
was to 'illustrate the present state of theatrical, orchestral, and
chamber music abroad', focusing on aspects that would be least
familiar to an English readership. There are detailed accounts of
Paris and Berlin, with prominence given to opera, theatre, art
galleries and monuments. Chorley also describes visits to
Brunswick, Leipzig, Dresden and Nuremburg, and performances by
artists including Mendelssohn and Liszt. He intersperses anecdotes
about transport, lodgings, landscapes and local customs. Chorley's
incisive and entertaining eyewitness accounts will fascinate
music-lovers and theatre historians, as well as others interested
in the performing arts or travel writing in the nineteenth-century.
Volume 2 describes his visits to the Harz mountains and Berlin.
Thirty Years' Musical Recollections, first published in 1862, is a
year-by-year commentary in two volumes on the European operas,
ballets, singers and dancers popular in London from 1830 to 1859.
It's author was music critic of The Athaneum for over thirty years
and also wrote book reviews, novels, plays and poems. Volume 1
covers the period 1830-1847 and serves as a valuable reference work
to the musical life of London during these years. Starting with his
reminiscences of the opera season in 1830, Chorley takes the reader
on a journey from early performances of Italian and German opera in
England, via works by Rossini, Bellini and Donizetti and the first
appearances of Lablache and of Mademoiselle Taglioni, through to
Verdi's operas in 1846. He also describes famous opera singers
including Maria Malibran, Giambattista Rubini, Madame Grisi, Madame
Pasta, Madame Persiani, Rachel Felix, Signor Mario, and
Mademoiselle Jenny Lind.
Henry Fothergill Chorley was music critic of The Athenaeum for over
thirty years, and published several books on the state of
contemporary European music, including Music and Manners in France
and Germany (1841) and Thirty Years' Musical Recollections (1862),
both reissued in this series. In the two-volume Modern German
Music, published in 1854, he revisits many of the topics and places
discussed in the 1841 volume, but views them from the other side of
the Year of Revolution, 1848, which, he argues, changed the
cultural as well as the political atmosphere of the German states
significantly and permanently. Lively descriptions of German
cities, their culture and especially their music festivals are
accompanied by extended essays on Spohr, Beethoven, Schubert and
Mendelssohn, but Chorley is by no means an uncritical observer, and
his comments on the rise of nationalism and militarism in the
German states after 1848 now seem prophetic.
Henry Fothergill Chorley was music critic of The Athenaeum for over
thirty years, and published several books on the state of
contemporary European music, including Music and Manners in France
and Germany (1841) and Thirty Years' Musical Recollections (1862),
both reissued in this series. In the two-volume Modern German
Music, published in 1854, he revisits many of the topics and places
discussed in the 1841 volume, but views them from the other side of
the Year of Revolution, 1848, which, he argues, changed the
cultural as well as the political atmosphere of the German states
significantly and permanently. Lively descriptions of German
cities, their culture and especially their music festivals are
accompanied by extended essays on Spohr, Beethoven, Schubert and
Mendelssohn, but Chorley is by no means an uncritical observer, and
his comments on the rise of nationalism and militarism in the
German states after 1848 now seem prophetic.
Henry Fothergill Chorley was music critic of The Athenaeum for over
thirty years. This three-volume book, published in 1841, originated
in a journal written by Chorley while travelling in Europe. His aim
was to 'illustrate the present state of theatrical, orchestral, and
chamber music abroad', focusing on aspects that would be least
familiar to an English readership. There are detailed accounts of
Paris and Berlin, with prominence given to opera, theatre, art
galleries and monuments. Chorley also describes visits to
Brunswick, Leipzig, Dresden and Nuremburg, and performances by
artists including Mendelssohn and Liszt. He intersperses anecdotes
about transport, lodgings, landscapes and local customs. Chorley's
incisive and entertaining eyewitness accounts will fascinate
music-lovers and theatre historians, as well as others interested
in the performing arts or travel writing in the nineteenth-century.
Volume 1 describes his visits to Paris and Brunswick, focusing on
opera.
Henry Fothergill Chorley was music critic of The Athenaeum for over
thirty years. This three-volume book, published in 1841, originated
in a journal written by Chorley while travelling in Europe. His aim
was to 'illustrate the present state of theatrical, orchestral, and
chamber music abroad', focusing on aspects that would be least
familiar to an English readership. There are detailed accounts of
Paris and Berlin, with prominence given to opera, theatre, art
galleries and monuments. Chorley also describes visits to
Brunswick, Leipzig, Dresden and Nuremburg, and performances by
artists including Mendelssohn and Liszt. He intersperses anecdotes
about transport, lodgings, landscapes and local customs. Chorley's
incisive and entertaining eyewitness accounts will fascinate
music-lovers and theatre historians, as well as others interested
in the performing arts or travel writing in the nineteenth-century.
Volume 3 describes visits to Leipzig, Dresden, Nuremburg and Paris.
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The Suburbans (Paperback)
Henry Fothergill Chorley, Felicia Dorothea Browne Hemans, Thomas William Hodgson Crosland
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R560
Discovery Miles 5 600
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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