Skip to product information
1 of 1

Cambridge University Press

Political Beethoven

Political Beethoven

Regular price $72.17 USD
Regular price Sale price $72.17 USD
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Format
Quantity
Musicians, music lovers and music critics have typically considered Beethoven's overtly political music as an aberration; at best, it is merely notorious, at worst, it is denigrated and ignored. In Political Beethoven Nicholas Mathew returns to the musical and social contexts of the composer's political music throughout his career - from the early marches and anti-French war songs of the 1790s to the grand orchestral and choral works for the Congress of Vienna - to argue that this marginalized functional art has much to teach us about the lofty Beethovenian sounds that came to define serious music in the nineteenth century. Beethoven's much-maligned political compositions, Mathew shows, lead us into the intricate political and aesthetic contexts that shaped all of his oeuvre, thus revealing the stylistic, ideological and psycho-social mechanisms that gave Beethoven's music such a powerful voice - a voice susceptible to repeated political appropriation, even to the present day.

Author: Nicholas Mathew
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 09/01/2016
Pages: 292
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 1.03lbs
Size: 9.61h x 6.69w x 0.61d
ISBN: 9781316616291

About the Author
Mathew, Nicholas: - Nicholas Mathew is a professor in the Department of Music at the University of California, Berkeley. He was educated at his local comprehensive school in Norwich, England, and went on to study music at Oriel College, Oxford and piano at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. After earning his doctorate from Cornell University, New York, where he also studied period pianos with Malcolm Bilson, he was a Junior Research Fellow at Jesus College, Oxford. He is editor, with W. Dean Sutcliffe, of the journal Eighteenth-Century Music and has published on matters relating to Beethoven, Haydn, Mozart, music aesthetics and musical performance in, among others, Musical Quarterly, Eighteenth-Century Music, Nineteenth-Century Music, Current Musicology and the Journal of the Royal Musical Association. He is a contributor to the volume Engaging Haydn (edited by Richard Will and Mary Hunter, 2012).

View full details