Richard Wagner
Self-Promotion and the Making of a Brand
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:10th May '12
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This book examines the innovative ways in which Richard Wagner made himself a celebrity, promoting himself using every means available.
This book examines the innovative ways in which Richard Wagner made himself a celebrity, promoting himself using every means available: autobiography, journal articles, short stories, newspaper announcements, letters, even his operas themselves. Vazsonyi reveals how Wagner created a niche for his works in the crowded opera market that continues to be unique.All modern artists have had to market themselves in some way. Richard Wagner may just have done it better than anyone else. In a self-promotional effort that began around 1840 in Paris, and lasted for the remainder of his career, Wagner claimed convincingly that he was the most German composer ever and the true successor of Beethoven. More significantly, he was an opera composer who declared that he was not composing operas. Instead, during the 1850s, he mapped out a new direction, conceiving of works that would break with tradition and be literally 'brand new'. This is the first study to examine the innovative ways in which Wagner made himself a celebrity, promoting himself using every means available: autobiography, journal articles, short stories, newspaper announcements, letters, even his operas themselves. Vazsonyi reveals how Wagner created a niche for his works in the crowded opera market that continues to be unique.
"It is ... a cracking good read as we learn about Wagner's abilities to turn himself into a 'brand' or to act as his own 'PR agent'. An important book, too, as Vazsonyi foregrounds an aspect of Wagner we hear too little about, re-aligning a great 19th-century figure through the filter of an avowedly 21st-century sensibility." --Opera
"...written with panache and élan, conveying with refreshing brevity a palpable sense of Wagner's indefatigable industry...the first scholarly text to take seriously Wagner's incessant self-promotional activity, Mr. Vazsonyi's book assumes considerable importance not only in musicology but also in the history of marketing." --Conor Farrington, Wall Street Journal
"The scholarship of Vazsonyi's study is solid; he knows the literature and is well read in current theory. Despite this, I am happy to report that his book is largely free of scholarship jargon. It also is relatively short, especially given the magnitude of the subject. Most importantly, it offers us a truly novel and illuminating take on the great, wily magician. This book is a most welcome addition to the library of literature on Wagner." --The Wagner Society of New York
'Vazsonyi's rigorous study is marvellously enlightening ...' --Laura Silverman, whatsonstage.com
"In a series of pithy, highly readable yet thoroughly documented chapters, Vazsonyi examines the way in which Wagner worked to develop what we would nowadays call his image..." -Daniel Snowman,Opera
ISBN: 9781107404397
Dimensions: 246mm x 189mm x 13mm
Weight: 430g
236 pages