Grieg
Music, Landscape and Norwegian Identity
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Boydell & Brewer Ltd
Published:15th Jun '06
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
An examination of the role of landscape and cultural identity in the music of Edvard Grieg. While Grieg's music continues to enjoy a prominent place in the concert hall and recording catalogues, it has yet to attract sustained analytical attention in Anglo-American scholarship. Daniel Grimley examines the role which music and landscape played in the formation of Norwegian cultural identity in the nineteenth century, and the function that landscape has performed in Grieg's work. It presents new perspectives on the relationships between music, landscape and identity. This tension between competing musical discourses - the folklorist, the nationalist and the modernist - offers one of the most vivid narratives in late-nineteenth and early-twentieth-century music, and suggests that Grieg is a more complex and challenging historical figure than his critical reception has often appeared to suggest. It is through the contested category of landscape, this book argues, that these tensions can be contextualised and ultimately resolved.
[Grimley] shows an impressive and wide-ranging scholarship and a mastery not only of Grieg's music but the culture of his time...an authoritative and well documented survey with generous musical examples and unlikely to be surpassed. -- Robert Layton * BBC MUSIC MAGAZINE *
An excellent source for new understandings of Grieg's music. * CHOICE *
Rigorously argued and strongly focused...a very fine study. * MUSIC & LETTERS *
ISBN: 9781843832102
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 548g
258 pages