Wagner and Venice (Eastman Studies in Music)
|
| List Price: | $65.00 |
| Price: | $47.45 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com
20 new or used available from $37.96
Average customer review:Product Description
Richard Wagner had a longstanding love affair with the city of Venice. His sudden death there in 1883 also initiated a process through which Wagner and his reputation were integrated into Venice's own cumulative cultural image. In Wagner and Venice, John Barker examines the connections between the great composer and the great city. The author traces patterns of Wagner's visits to Venice during his lifetime, considers what the city came to mean to Wagner, and investigates the details surrounding his death. Barker also examines how Venice viewed Wagner, by analyzing the landmark presentation of Wagner's Ring cycle two months after the composer's death, and by considering Venice's subsequent extensive Wagner celebrations and commemorations. Throughout the volume, biographical detail from new and previously unavailable sources provides readers with a fresh interpretation of this seminal figure. Those already familiar with Wagner's life will find new information about, and insights into, the man and his career, while simultaneously discovering a neglected corner of Italian and Venetian cultural history. John W. Barker is emeritus professor of history at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, specializing in medieval (including Venetian) history. He is also a passionate music lover and record collector, and an active music critic and journalist.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1242850 in Books
- Published on: 2008-11-30
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 404 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
A highly informative, smartly written book. Barker's Wagner and Venice is exhaustive in its research yet reads at times like a first-rate mystery, at other times like an intense romance novel about the special relationship between a man and a city. The copious illustrations and fifteen documentary addenda further enrich this study, which friends of Wagner (and Venice) will certainly want to add to their collections. --James Deaville, associate professor of music at Carleton University, and coeditor of Wagner in Rehearsal, 1875-1876: The Diaries of Richard Fricke
A huge amount of material not previously available-first-hand observations and analyses. the amount of detail here is astonishing. 46 black-and-white photos bring people and places to life. . . . (A) loving tribute to Wagner and Venice.-AMERICAN RECORD GUIDE (Charles H. Parsons) (Barker's) impressively researched book is well crafted and highly absorbing. . . . The author's narrative skill allows him to avoid repetition and academic jargon while painting full portraits of a fascinating cast of characters. . . . Well-chosen illustrations enhance the reader's experience.--OPERA NEWS ONLINE Throughout his book Barker makes effective use of newspaper archives. . . . Barker's 'assimilative source study' has now largely filled the critical gap (regarding the disputed biographical documents collected in 1883 by Henriette Perl). . . . (The book is marked by) the author's palpable enthusiasm for and knowledge of both Wagner and Venice. --MUSICAL TIMES (David Cormack) (Gives) a real sense of how Venice itself interacted with the composer's creative consciousness. . . . A vital source. . . . pioneering work. --THE WAGNER JOURNAL (David Conway) It was in Venice that Wagner composed much of the second act of Tristan und Isolde, with its ecstatic love duet, and it was in Venice that he died two and a half decades later. Charting the composer's own love affair with La Serenissima over that period has been the quarter-of-a-century mission of John W. Barker, who sifts the plethora of eye-witness accounts with a forensic skill that brings to light all manner of fascinating documentary detail. A book to be relished by lovers of Wagner, of Venice, or of both. -- Barry Millington, Author of Wagner, editor of The Wagner Compendium,/ and coeditor of Selected Letters of Richard Wagner A highly informative, smartly written book. Barker's Wagner and Venice is exhaustive in its research yet reads at times like a first-rate mystery, at other times like an intense romance novel about the special relationship between a man and a city. The copious illustrations and fifteen documentary addenda further enrich this study, which friends of Wagner (and Venice) will certainly want to add to their collections. -- James Deaville, associate professor of music at Carleton University, and coeditor of Wagner in Rehearsal, 1875-1876: The Diaries of Richard Fricke
It was in Venice that Wagner composed much of the second act of Tristan und Isolde, with its ecstatic love duet, and it was in Venice that he died two and a half decades later. Charting the composer's own love affair with La Serenissima over that period has been the quarter-of-a-century mission of John W. Barker, who sifts the plethora of eye-witness accounts with a forensic skill that brings to light all manner of fascinating documentary detail. A book to be relished by lovers of Wagner, of Venice, or of both. --Barry Millington, Author of Wagner, editor of The Wagner Compendium, and coeditor of Selected Letters of Richard Wagner
Customer Reviews
An Important Addition to Wagner literature
This is a very important addition to the literature about Richard Wagner, especially about his final visit to Venice. It covers all of his visits to that city in some detail. Also it deals with the spread of his music in Italy and beyond following his death in Venice. Somewhat repetitious in details and extremely detailed. Perhaps not for the casual reader, but indispensable for anyone with a genuine interest in this great composer and the influence Venice had on his creativity.




