Historical Dictionary of Romantic Music

By (author) John M. Cooper Assisted by Randy Kinnett

Hardback - £181.00

Publication date:

17 October 2013

Length of book:

792 pages

Publisher

Scarecrow Press

Dimensions:

237x160mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9780810872301

This Historical Dictionary of Romantic Music provides detailed and authoritative articles for the most important composers, concepts, genres, music educators, performers, theorists, writings, and works of cultivated music in Europe and the Americas during the period 1789-1914. The roster of biographical entries includes not only canonical composers such as Beethoven, Berlioz, Brahms, Chopin, Fauré, Grieg, Liszt, Mahler, Mendelssohn, Mussorgsky, Rossini, Schubert, Robert Schumann, Sibelius, Strauss, Tchaikovsky, Verdi, Wagner, and Wolf, but also less-well-known distinguished contemporaries of those composers (among them George Whitefield Chadwick, Cécile Chaminade, Ernesto Elorduy, Chiquinha Gonzaga, Fanny Hensel, C. H. Parry, and Clara Schumann, to name but a few). Significant literary and cultural topics such as Goethe’s Faust and Wagner’s theoretical writings of the 1850s, as well as entries on other cultural luminaries who significantly influenced music’s Romanticisms – among them J. S. Bach, Goethe, Haydn, Handel, Heine, Mozart, Schiller, and Shakespeare – are also included. Entries on important institutions (conservatory, orphéon, Männerchor), concepts (biographical fallacy, copyright, exoticism, feminism, nationalism, performance practice), and political caesurae and movements (First and Second French Empire, First, Second, and Third French Republic, Franco-Prussian War, Revolutions of 1848, Risorgimento) round out the dictionary section.

Like other volumes in this series, this book's more than 500 entries are preceded by an introductory essay that explains the essential concepts necessary for understanding and exploring further the vast and complex musical landscape of Romanticism, plus a detailed Chronology. Concluding the volume is an extensive bibliography that lists the most important source-critical series of editions of Romantic music, important general writings on the period and its music, and composer-by-composer bibliographies.
This volume offers hundreds of entries for Romantic period composers, performers, styles, and other subjects and terms. Many appear in other reference works, most notably New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, but many are unique to this one. The major difference is that the authors here present entries in context with regard to specific styles, customs, and thinking of the Romantic period—the so called long nineteenth century. For example, entries such as String quartets are discussed in terms of their nineteenth-century form, and eighteenth-century composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s entry delves into how he and his music were viewed throughout the 100 years after his death. Recommended for most public and academic libraries.