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Lateness and Brahms Summary

Lateness and Brahms: Music and Culture in the Twilight of Viennese Liberalism by Margaret Notley (Assistant Professor of Music History, Assistant Professor of Music History, University of North Texas)

Lateness and Brahms takes up the fascinating, yet understudied problem of how Brahms fits into the culture of turn-of-the-century Vienna. Brahms's conspicuous and puzzling absence in previous scholarly accounts of the time and place raises important questions, and as Margaret Notley demonstrates, the tendency to view him in neutralized, ahistorical terms has made his music seem far less interesting than it truly is. In pursuit of an historical Brahms, Notley focuses on the later chamber music, drawing on various documents and perspectives, but with particular emphasis on the relevance of Western Marxist critical traditions.

Lateness and Brahms Reviews

Lateness and Brahms brilliantly explores the ideological intertwinings between Austrian political life and the various genres of 'absolute' music, which have often been regarded as only abstract or purely aesthetic. Notley flings open the doors of cultural context and reception for Brahms at the end of his career. Uncovering the key debates surrounding this composer and his musical traditions, she restores crucial factors of local framing and connotation obvious to his contemporaries but largely lost to later generations. A rich tapestry of close reading and cultural interpretation, this indispensable book not only obliges us to rethink late Brahms and his world but also challenges us to confront how we have constructed other composers in our own histories and narratives. This is music and cultural history at its best. * James Hepokoski, Yale University *
In this fascinating book, we learn about Brahms's late instrumental works through a variety of prisms * political, analytical, social, historical, cultural and more *

About Margaret Notley (Assistant Professor of Music History, Assistant Professor of Music History, University of North Texas)

Margaret Notley, an Associate Professor of Music History at the University of North Texas, has published widely on a number of topics. Her article Late-Nineteenth-Century Chamber Music and the Cult of the Classical Adagio won the 2000 Alfred Einstein Award given by the American Musicological Society.

Table of Contents

Introduction, Lateness and Brahms Chapter 1: Brahms as Liberal, Bruckner as Other Chapter 2: Brahms and the Problem of Late Style Chapter 3: Themes and First Movements: Questions of Lateness and Individualism Chapter 4: Music Pedagogy, Musicology, and Brahm's Collection of Octaves and Fifths: Historical Decline, Personal Renewal Chapter 5: Volksconcerte and Concepts of Genre in Brahm's Vienna Chaper 6: Adagios in Brahms's Late Chamber Music: Genre Aesthetics and Cultural Critique Epilogue, The Twilight of Liberalism Appendix, Brahms's Multimovement Works: Dates of Completion and Tempo Designations for the Slow Movements Bibiography Index

Additional information

NLS9780190628420
9780190628420
0190628421
Lateness and Brahms: Music and Culture in the Twilight of Viennese Liberalism by Margaret Notley (Assistant Professor of Music History, Assistant Professor of Music History, University of North Texas)
New
Paperback
Oxford University Press Inc
2016-11-03
256
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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