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The Substance of Things Heard
Writings about Music
Paul Griffiths

Paul Griffiths offers his own personal selection of some of his most substantial and imaginative articles and concert reviews from over three decades of indefatigable concertgoing around the world. He reports on premieres and other important performances of works by such composers as Elliott Carter, Sofia Gubaidulina, Karlheinz Stockhausen, and Steve Reich, as well as Harrison Birtwistle and other important British figures.
Griffiths vividly conveys the vision, aura, and idiosyncrasies of prominent pianists, singers, and conductors (such as Herbert von Karajan), and debates changing styles of performing Monteverdi and Purcell. A particular delight is his response to the world of opera, including Debussy's Pelléas et Mélisande (six contrasting productions), Pavarotti and Domingo in Verdi at New York's Metropolitan Opera, Schoenberg's Moses and Aaron, and two wildly different Jonathan Miller versions of Mozart's Don Giovanni.
From the author's preface: "We cannot say what music is. Yet we are verbal creatures, and strive with words to cast a net around it, knowing most of this immaterial stuff will evade capture. The stories that follow cover a wide range of events over a period of great change. Yet the net's aim was always the same, to catch the substance of things heard.
"Criticism has to work largely by analogy and metaphor. This is no limitation. It is largely through such verbal ties that music is linked to other sorts of experience, not least the natural world and the orchestra of our feelings."

Paul Griffiths's reviews and articles have appeared extensively in both Britain (Times, Financial Times, Times Literary Supplement) and the United States (New Yorker, New York Times). He has written numerous books on Bartók, Cage, Messiaen, Boulez, Maxwell Davies, twentieth-century music, opera, and the string quartet, and is the author of the recent Penguin Companion to Classical Music. He is also author of The Sea on Fire: Jean Barraqué f

 

DETAILS

400 pages
Size: 9 x 6
13 digit ISBN: 9781580462068
Binding: Hardback
First published: 15/Sep/2005
Last printed: 15/Sep/2005
Price: 65.00 USD / 25.00 GBP
Imprint: University of Rochester Press
Series: Eastman Studies in Music
Subject: Music

BIC class: AVH

STATUS: Available
Details updated on 18/11/2008

Contents
1   A Debut
2   Berio
3   Paths to Montsalvat
4   Carter
5   Da lontano
6   Gubaidulina
7   A Handful of Pianists
8   Purcell
9   Around New York
10   Tippett
11   Being in Assisi
12   Boulez
13   The Composer's Voice
14   Mozart 1991
15   A Decade of Don Giovannis
16   Henze
17   Operatic Passions
18   Vivier
19   At the Movies
20   Schoenberg on the Stage
21   Five British Composers
22   Lachenmann
23   Mapping Mtsensk
24   Stockhausen
25   Behind the Rusting Curtain
26   Verdi at the Met
27   A Quintet of Singers
28   Schnittke
29   How It Was, Maybe
30   Reich
31   Tracks in Allemonde
32   Birtwistle
33   A Departure

Reviews
Griffiths writes more eloquently and with greater insight than any of his peers...Illuminating, translucent, sagacious, [The Substance of Things Heard] is a fine anthology, and an indispensable addition to the library of any serious classical music lover. TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT

An informed and passionate involvement with new music, an imaginative and civilised turn of the phrase, and the readiness to warmly appreciate. --Alfred Brendel, pianist and author of Alfred Brendel on Music: Collected Essays (Chicago Review Press)

Music criticism in the English language has been fortunate in attracting distinguished writers, such as George Bernard Shaw and Ezra Pound. Nowadays, Paul Griffiths comes closest to filling this ecological niche. Future musicologists will have to take Griffiths's responses into account in mapping the relation between music and culture in the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. --Daniel Albright (Harvard University), author of Untwisting the Serpent: Modernism in Music, Literature, and Other Arts (University of Chicago Press).

A fascinating read. --operatic tenor and recitalist Ian Bostridge

No critic gives so interesting, complete, judicious and readable an account of the world of music as Paul Griffiths. --Charles Rosen, pianist and author of Beethoven's Piano Sonatas (Yale), The Romantic Generation (Harvard), and Piano Notes: The World of the Pianist (Free Press).

[T]here is no mistaking the penetration and eloquence of Griffiths's own singular voice...on every page of this distinguished work. --Arnold Whittall, MUSICAL TIMES

A superb, highly recommended anthology. - THE BOOK DEPOSITORY [Mark Thwaite]




 

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