Brahms's Elegies : the poetics of loss in nineteenth-century German culture

Bibliographic Information

Brahms's Elegies : the poetics of loss in nineteenth-century German culture

Nicole Grimes

(Music in context)

Cambridge University Press, 2021

  • : pbk

Available at  / 1 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [254]- 270) and index

Originally published: 2019

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Nicole Grimes provides a compellingly fresh perspective on a series of Brahms's elegiac works by bringing together the disciplines of historical musicology, German studies, and cultural history. Her exploration of the expressive potential of Schicksalslied, Nanie, Gesang der Parzen, and the Vier ernste Gesange reveals the philosophical weight of this music. She considers the German tradition of the poetics of loss that extends from the late-eighteenth-century texts by Hoelderlin, Schiller and Goethe set by Brahms, and includes other philosophical and poetic works present in his library, to the mid-twentieth-century aesthetics of Adorno, who was preoccupied as much by Brahms as by their shared literary heritage. Her multifaceted focus on endings - the end of tonality, the end of the nineteenth century, and themes of loss in the music - illuminates our understanding of Brahms and lateness, and the place of Brahms in the fabric of modernist culture.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • 1. Brahms's ascending circle: Hoelderlin and Schicksalslied
  • 2. The ennoblement of mourning: Nanie and the death of beauty
  • 3. A disembodied head for mythic justice: Gesang der Parzen
  • 4. The last great cultural harvest: Nietzsche and the Vier ernste Gesange
  • 5. The sense of an ending: music's return to the land of childhood
  • Epilogue.

by "Nielsen BookData"

Related Books: 1-1 of 1

Details

Page Top