Brahms beyond mastery : his Sarabande and Gavotte, and its recompositions

Bibliographic Information

Brahms beyond mastery : his Sarabande and Gavotte, and its recompositions

Robert Pascall

(Royal Musical Association monographs, 21)

Ashgate, c2013

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Note

Includes bibliographical references ( p. [81]-90) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In 1853 Robert Schumann identified fully-formed compositional mastery in the young Brahms, who nevertheless in the years following embarked on a period of intensive further study, producing, among other works, the neo-baroque Sarabande and Gavotte. These dances have not been properly recognized as constituting a distinct Brahms work before now, but manuscript evidence and their performance history indicate that Brahms and his friends thought of them as such in the mid-1850s, when they became the first music of his performed publicly in Gdansk, Vienna, Budapest and London. He later suppressed the dances, using them instead as a thematic quarry for three chamber music masterpieces, from different stages in his life and in distinctly different ways: the Second String Sextet, the First String Quintet and the Clarinet Quintet. This book gives an account of the compositional and performance history, stylistic features and re-uses of the dances, setting these in the wider context of Brahms's developing creative concerns and trajectory. It constitutes therefore a study of a 'lost' work, of how a fully-formed master opens himself to 'the in-flowing from afar' (in Martin Heidegger's terms), and of the transformative reach and concomitant expressive richness of Brahms's creative thought.

Table of Contents

  • Contents: Preface
  • The Sarabande and Gavotte
  • The Second String Sextet, op. 36, and its second movement
  • The First String Quintet, op. 88, and its second movement
  • The Clarinet Quintet, op. 115
  • Conclusion
  • Bibliography
  • Index.

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