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Richard Wagner (1813-83) grew up in Dresden and served as
Kapellmeister to King Frederick Augustus II of Saxony there from
1843 until he was forced to flee the country after the 1849
uprising. His operas Rienzi and Der fliegende Hollander received
their first performances at the Dresden Court Theatre. During his
time in the city, Wagner became firm friends with the composer and
violinist Theodor Uhlig, the stage manager and chorus master
Wilhelm Fischer, and the comedian and costume designer Ferdinand
Heine. This collection of letters from the composer to his three
great friends covers the period 1841-68. First published in 1888,
the letters are reissued here in the 1890 English translation by
the pianist and Beethoven scholar John South Shedlock (1843-1919).
They offer an intimate and compelling insight into Wagner's
personal and professional life and his forthright views on many
contemporary musicians and public figures.
Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827) was a prolific letter writer.
Often written in great haste - he regularly signed off 'in der
Eile' - his correspondence allows us to follow his anxieties and
preoccupations. From his first letter, written at the age of
thirteen, wherein he declared his lifelong commitment to the craft
of music, through the poignant 'Heiligenstadt Testament', up to the
final codicil to his will, these documents reveal the human figure
behind some of the greatest music ever written. In this two-volume
English translation of 1909, John South Shedlock (1843-1919)
retains as far as possible the idiosyncratic and error-ridden texts
as written by the great composer. Volume 1 covers the years to
1816, and includes the heartbreaking unsent 1802 letter to his
brothers in which Beethoven reveals his misery over his increasing
deafness and his determination to overcome his physical and
emotional weaknesses.
Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827) was a prolific letter writer.
Often written in great haste - he regularly signed off 'in der
Eile' - his correspondence allows us to follow his anxieties and
preoccupations. From his first letter, written at the age of
thirteen, wherein he declared his lifelong commitment to the craft
of music, through the poignant 'Heiligenstadt Testament', up to the
final codicil to his will, these documents reveal the human figure
behind some of the greatest music ever written. In this two-volume
English translation of 1909, John South Shedlock (1843-1919)
retains as far as possible the idiosyncratic and error-ridden texts
as written by the great composer. Spanning the period 1816-27,
Volume 2 finds Beethoven concerned over his financial situation and
the poor printing of his music, and includes the final codicil to
his will, written just three days before his death.
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