This handsomely produced volume can be read with profit by amateurs, connoisseurs, and scholars alike ...Thoughtful, erudite and compelling. A labor of love, it is also the brief of a skilled advocate; Rubbra's music, now lost in the twilight of musical limbo, fully merits such a committed redeemer. NOTES
The reader is treated to a wide-ranging discussion that is stylishly written and invitingly presented. MUSICAL TIMES
[An] excellent new biography. TLS
Such are [Black's] skill and insights that there are few works about which he does not have something penetrating to say. His discussion of individual works engages the interest of the lay reader in a way that eludes...most other writers on matters musical. He brings the music and the issues it raises alive...This is an important book that should be in the library of every self-respecting music lover. INTERNATIONAL RECORD REVIEW [Robert Layton]
Leo Black, Edmund Rubbra's Oxford pupil in the 1950s, later worked in BBC Radio as his music became unfashionable. This first substantial study for fifteen years is only the third in all, and coincides with his gradual re-discovery. A succinct biographical sketch throws light on legends about the BBC and Rubbra; there are full programme notes on each symphony, with shorter accounts of important non-symphonic works, in particular a 'triptych' of concertos from the 1950s and major liturgical pieces composed around the time of the Second Vatican Council, after Rubbra's conversion to Catholicism. The question of his 'mysticism' is considered. Musical examples are readable by anyone who ever sang or played from sheet music.
Rubbra [b. Northampton 1901, d. Gerrard's Cross 1986] revivified traditions reaching back far into England's musical and religious history, without pastiche or self-conscious nationalism. His eleven symphonies covered a period of musical and political upheaval [1934 - 1980], the first four reflecting the uneasy later-1930s, with a second global conflict no longer avoidable. The immediately-post-war ones document new emotional depths and his conversion, while the final symphonies show a man still in search of peace and reconciliation, overlooked by the world but certain he was on the right path.
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Taschenbuch. Zustand: Neu. Neuware - Leo Black, a pupil of Rubbra in the 1950s, presents a full-scale study of his symphonies (the first for twenty years). A biographical sketch throws light on legends about the BBC and Rubbra; there are full programme notes on eachsymphony, with accounts of important non-symphonic works. Artikel-Nr. 9781843839330
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Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
Zustand: New. Klappentext. Artikel-Nr. 905643349
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