Description
Korstvedt explains key concepts from Bloch's musical philosophy, making his complex ideas accessible for modern musical scholars.
About the Author
Benjamin M. Korstvedt is the George N. and Selma U. Jeppson Professor of Music at Clark University, Worcester, Massachusetts and a former Senior Fellow at the Internationales Forschungszentrum Kulturwissenschaften in Vienna. He is the author of Bruckner: Symphony No. 8 in the Cambridge Music Handbooks series, and has published articles on Bruckner's symphonies, music criticism in fin-de-siecle Vienna, and Bruckner scholarship in the Third Reich. He is the editor of the first modern edition of the 1888 version of Bruckner's Fourth Symphony, which is published as part of the Bruckner Collected Works edition (Vienna, 2004) and has been widely performed and recorded.
Reviews
'Despite Ernst Bloch's significance for the philosophical reception of Austro-German music, his work has too often been overlooked in the literature, eclipsed especially by his contemporary Adorno. Benjamin Korstvedt's Listening for Utopia offers a welcome corrective to this tendency. Marshalling a formidable knowledge of Bloch's writings and their cultural context, and viewing it through the prism of his views on the music of Mozart, Wagner, Brahms and Bruckner, Korstvedt mixes clear and insightful commentary on Bloch's ideas with apposite studies of their musicological and music-analytical implications. The result is a most valuable contribution to our understanding of both Bloch and the repertoire he addressed.' Julian Horton, University College Dublin
Book Information
ISBN 9780521896153
Author Benjamin M. Korstvedt
Format Hardback
Page Count 234
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 640g
Dimensions(mm) 255mm * 182mm * 16mm