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The Indispensable Composers

A Personal Guide

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
An exploration into the question of greatness from the Chief Classical Music Critic of the New York Times
When he began to listen to the great works of classical music as a child, Anthony Tommasini had many questions. Why did a particular piece move him? How did the music work? Over time, he realized that his passion for this music was not enough. He needed to understand it. Take Bach, for starters. Who was he? How does one account for his music and its unshakeable hold on us today?
As a critic, Tommasini has devoted particular attention to living composers and overlooked repertory. But, like all classical music lovers, the canon has remained central for him. In 2011, in his role as the Chief Classical Music Critic for the New York Times, he wrote a popular series in which he somewhat cheekily set out to determine the all-time top ten composers. Inviting input from readers, Tommasini wrestled with questions of greatness. Readers joined the exercise in droves. Some railed against classical music’s obsession with greatness but then raged when Mahler was left off the final list. This intellectual game reminded them why they loved music in the first place.
Now in THE INDISPENSABLE COMPOSERS, Tommasini offers his own personal guide to the canon—and what greatness really means in classical music. What does it mean to be canonical now? Who gets to say? And do we have enough perspective on the 20th century to even begin assessing it? To make his case, Tommasini draws on elements of biography, the anxiety of influence, the composer's relationships with colleagues, and shifting attitudes toward a composer's work over time. Because he has spent his life contemplating these titans, Tommasini shares impressions from performances he has heard or given or moments when his own biography proves revealing.
As he argues for his particular pantheon of indispensable composers, Anthony Tommasini provides a masterclass in what to listen for and how to understand what music does to us.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 3, 2018
      Seventeen classical composers are celebrated in these insightful critical essays. A concert pianist and New York Times classical music critic, Tommasini (Virgil Thompson: Composer in the Aisle) expands on a series of his newspaper articles to present a roster of favorites, including Renaissance pioneer Monteverdi; repertory pillars Bach, Beethoven, Haydn, Mozart, and Schubert; opera auteurs Verdi and Puccini; and the high modernist Schoenberg, whose atonal music he loves. Tommasini twines engaging biographical sketches of the maestros and their tragic ailments, love affairs, and endless scrambles for money with appreciations of masterpieces, the latter enriched by his memories of hearing and performing them. The portraits merge into a metanarrative about the emergence of the classical tonal language of comprehensible keys and lucid harmonies and its decay (or liberation) into unmoored dissonance. Tommasini’s interpretations sometimes overreach—he detects a “gay sensibility” (as have other critics) in the music of Schubert, because “seemingly happy passages contain disquieting subliminal elements”—but he excels at the difficult task of capturing music in words. “ gnarly, slow theme, like the grim song of a Slavic bass” with “hulking, weighty, strange intervals and chords” nails Chopin’s Prelude No. 2. The result is an engrossing study that will appeal to both classical music aficionados and novice listeners who want a road map. Agent: Andrew Wylie, the Wylie Agency.

    • Kirkus

      September 1, 2018
      A spirited musical compendium to the best of the best.New York Times chief classic music critic Tommasini (Opera: A Critic's Guide to the 100 Most Important Works and the Best Recordings, 2004, etc.) picks the "unfathomable achievements of indispensable--and indisputably great--composers." His goal is to keep his assessments simple, insightful, and jargon-free, and he succeeds. The author draws on biographical and historical materials, revealing anecdotes, and his extensive personal exposure to innumerable musical performances and skill as a pianist to provide succinct, highly readable miniprofiles of the greats. Entertaining, highly enthusiastic, and very knowledgeable, he's the perfect guide. Tommasini begins in the 16th century, with Monteverdi, the "creator of modern music," and ends in the 20th with a "modernist master," Bartók. The author is awestruck with the "staggering genius and superhuman achievement" of Bach's "innate musical talents of astonishing depth." For "all [of Handel's] genius as a musical dramatist," Tommasini suggests, he had his "show-biz side," and "reaching the public was crucial to his aesthetic." The author marvels that over a 75-year period, one city, Vienna, "fostered the work of four of the most titanic composers in music history": Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, and Schubert, that "uncanny...hypersensitive outcast (a gay outcast?)." Recalling an "extraordinary" performance of Beethoven's Fourth Concerto, Tommasini can't help himself: "This is Beethoven! This is life!" If the author could go "backward in time to hear just one legendary composer in performance," it would be Chopin, "for sure." He encourages listeners to "see through the nastiness of Wagner the man to the beauty of his art." And "if there is one word that gets at the core of Brahms's music for me, it's breadth."Also starring Schumann, Verdi, Debussy, Puccini, Schoenberg, Stravinsky and, briefly, some up-and-comers like Philip Glass and George Benjamin, all exuberantly presented for your edification and enjoyment.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      October 15, 2018

      Tommasini is no stranger to music: at 16, he won a piano competition in Manhattan and went on to study music at Yale and Boston University, earning both a master of arts and a doctor of arts in music. In his role as the chief classical music critic for the New York Times, he is eminently qualified to share his expertise in what became known as the Top Ten Composer Project, the basis for this book. The first thing readers will notice is that there are more than ten composers here--in all classical genres--as the author was encouraged to say more about why composers were, or were not, chosen. This expanded list is a treasure trove of biographical information and a primer on the language and notation of music itself, and, yes, he explains terminology as he goes. VERDICT Tommasini makes a potentially dry and academic subject accessible. This is, of course, of special interest to musicologists and performers, but it will also appeal to listeners of classical music.--Virginia Johnson, John Curtis P.L., Hanover, MA

      Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      September 1, 2018
      A spirited musical compendium to the best of the best.New York Times chief classic music critic Tommasini (Opera: A Critic's Guide to the 100 Most Important Works and the Best Recordings, 2004, etc.) picks the "unfathomable achievements of indispensable--and indisputably great--composers." His goal is to keep his assessments simple, insightful, and jargon-free, and he succeeds. The author draws on biographical and historical materials, revealing anecdotes, and his extensive personal exposure to innumerable musical performances and skill as a pianist to provide succinct, highly readable miniprofiles of the greats. Entertaining, highly enthusiastic, and very knowledgeable, he's the perfect guide. Tommasini begins in the 16th century, with Monteverdi, the "creator of modern music," and ends in the 20th with a "modernist master," Bart�k. The author is awestruck with the "staggering genius and superhuman achievement" of Bach's "innate musical talents of astonishing depth." For "all [of Handel's] genius as a musical dramatist," Tommasini suggests, he had his "show-biz side," and "reaching the public was crucial to his aesthetic." The author marvels that over a 75-year period, one city, Vienna, "fostered the work of four of the most titanic composers in music history": Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, and Schubert, that "uncanny...hypersensitive outcast (a gay outcast?)." Recalling an "extraordinary" performance of Beethoven's Fourth Concerto, Tommasini can't help himself: "This is Beethoven! This is life!" If the author could go "backward in time to hear just one legendary composer in performance," it would be Chopin, "for sure." He encourages listeners to "see through the nastiness of Wagner the man to the beauty of his art." And "if there is one word that gets at the core of Brahms's music for me, it's breadth."Also starring Schumann, Verdi, Debussy, Puccini, Schoenberg, Stravinsky and, briefly, some up-and-comers like Philip Glass and George Benjamin, all exuberantly presented for your edification and enjoyment.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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