Abstract

und Ungarn. Biographische, rezeptionsgeschichtliche, quellenkritische und analytische Studien. By Adam Gellen. Tutzing: Hans Schneider, 2011. [x, 730 p. ISBN 9783862960194. i85.] Illustrations, music examples, facsimiles, bibliography, index.Many graduate students will likely turn green with envy when opening this volume: Adam Gellen succeeded in finding a dissertation topic related to a that has often been touched upon by earlier generations of scholars, but not yet received the kind of monographic treatment it surely deserved.Ignoring the brief introduction and the concluding summary, the book consists of four chapters of rather diverse lengths. The first two provide the background for the following discussion; in the Nineteenth Century includes not merely historical and music historical overviews, but also useful sociological discussion of the melting pot character of Budapest in Brahms's time, while Music and the Style Hongrois surveys the diverse genres and musical features plausibly identified as by the contemporary audience. While readers familiar with Hungarian music history will find little new in these sections, newcomers-arguably the majority of the book's audience, whose interests lie more with than Hungarian culture in general-all of this is certainly welcome, and reflects a solid grasp of the relevant literature.It is thus in the following chapter, entitled Brahms and Hungary, that the author starts to present his own discoveries, which result from his careful reconsideration of the evidence related to Brahms's contacts with Hungarian music and musicians. As it turns out, much of what standard biographies relate on this matter is apocryphal: there is no evidence that the composer would have mingled with emigrant Hungarian soldiers soon after the unsuccessful War of Liberation in 1848-49; it is also unlikely that he would have met Ede Remenyi, his initiator to the Hungarian- Gypsy idiom, earlier than January 1853. In addition, the famous story about falling asleep during Liszt's performance of his B-minor Sonata seems pure fabrication. As to the composer's later contacts, Gellen believes that, even if seems to have had a positive opinion about Erno Dohnanyi's C-minor Piano Quintet, the much-quoted sentence-I could not have done that better myself-probably never lefthis mouth.Expanding on the sociological inquiries of his introduction, Gellen does a good job in spotting the similarities among the backgrounds of diverse Hungarian personalities with whom had close relationships. The gist of his findings is that the composer, who showed minimal interest in ever learning a foreign language, actually preferred to remain on cultural soil even when leaving his home: most of his friends and acquaintances came from German or Jewish families, spoke German as their mother tongue, and in fact advocated German rather than Hungarian culture; the emigrant violin virtuoso Remenyi, the life-long friend and musical advisor Joseph Joachim, and the Viennese fellow composer Carl Goldmark are only the best-known examples. In that light, the eighteen trips made to Hungary between 1867 and 1891, and the twenty-eight concerts in which he participated during those trips, may to a great extent be due to the fact that in Budapest he could feel very much at home (even the mostly favorable local reviews echoed the arguments he knew so well from the Austrian and German press). That said, obviously considered his Budapest sojourns as good opportunities to deepen his knowledge of both Hungarian music and food (especially goulash), and his decision to have several important works premiered in the Hungarian capital-the Bflat Major Piano Concerto (op. 83), the C-minor Piano Trio (op. 101), the D-minor Sonata for Violin and Piano (op. 108), and the revised B-major Piano Trio (op. 8)- suggests that he must have been satisfied with both the available performers and the receptive audience. …

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.