Harald Krebs is Professor of Music at the University of Victoria. His book, Fantasy Pieces: Metrical Dissonance in the Music of Robert Schumann (Oxford 1999), was awarded the Society for Music Theory's Wallace Berry Award in 2002. He has published widely on 19th- and early 20th-century music, and has lectured and performed as a pianist throughout North America and Europe. Sharon Krebs holds degrees in human physiology and Germanic Studies. She is active as a singer and performs frequently in Canada, the United States, and Europe. She is the author of several articles on Josephine Lang and Reinhold Köstlin.
"Long overdue, a skillful blend of biography and musical analysis,
with rewarding, close, and sensitive readings of many of Josephine
Lang's Lieder, her acknowledged 'diary.' The Krebs' research should
go a long way toward reclaiming an unjustly neglected composer and
reminding us how much of nineteenth-century musical life remains
terra incognita."--R. Larry Todd, Arts & Sciences Professor, Duke
University, and author of Mendelssohn: A
Life in Music
"Here it is: the first comprehensive study of this unduly neglected
19th-century composer. Krebs and Krebs offer a rich portrait of
Lang's life and career, and especially open our minds and senses to
her magnificent Lieder. With this book and companion CD, Lang's
music finally gets the recognition it deserves and joins the ranks
of great German art-song repertoire of the Romantic
period."--Marcia J. Citron, Lovett Distinguished Service Professor
of Musicology,
Rice University, and author of Gender and the Musical Canon
"Josephine Lang, an important song composer from the mid-19th
century, has had to wait a long time for an account of her life and
works worthy of her prodigious gifts. At last we have this superb
treatment by Harald and Sharon Krebs, steeped in the primary
sources, rich in analytical detail, and accompanied by numerous
score excerpts and recordings of thirty of Lang's songs performed
by the authors. This is as thorough and engaging a treatment of
Lang's life
and works as we are ever likely to have."--Joseph N. Straus,
Professor of Music Theory, CUNY Graduate Center
"Long overdue, a skillful blend of biography and musical analysis,
with rewarding, close, and sensitive readings of many of Josephine
Lang's Lieder, her acknowledged 'diary.' The Krebs' research should
go a long way toward reclaiming an unjustly neglected composer and
reminding us how much of nineteenth-century musical life remains
terra incognita."--R. Larry Todd, Arts & Sciences Professor, Duke
University, and author of Mendelssohn: A
Life in Music
"Here it is: the first comprehensive study of this unduly neglected
19th-century composer. Krebs and Krebs offer a rich portrait of
Lang's life and career, and especially open our minds and senses to
her magnificent Lieder. With this book and companion CD, Lang's
music finally gets the recognition it deserves and joins the ranks
of great German art-song repertoire of the Romantic
period."--Marcia J. Citron, Lovett Distinguished Service Professor
of Musicology,
Rice University, and author of Gender and the Musical Canon
"Josephine Lang, an important song composer from the mid-19th
century, has had to wait a long time for an account of her life and
works worthy of her prodigious gifts. At last we have this superb
treatment by Harald and Sharon Krebs, steeped in the primary
sources, rich in analytical detail, and accompanied by numerous
score excerpts and recordings of thirty of Lang's songs performed
by the authors. This is as thorough and engaging a treatment of
Lang's life
and works as we are ever likely to have."--Joseph N. Straus,
Professor of Music Theory, CUNY Graduate Center
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