Preface Abbreviations Genesis and Historical Place Contemporaries Documents Commentaries Analysis Theme First Movement Melancholy The Middle Movements Second Movement Third Movement Fourth Movement In Conclusion: Idyll, Melancholy, and Monumental Form Idyll Strategies Brahms's Second Again Bibliography Index of Names and Musical Works
Late Idyll is not only a superlative study of Brahms but an indispensable study of nineteenth-century genre. -- Charles Rosen Reinhold Brinkmann's Late Idyll is that rare book by a musicologist that anyone seriously interested in Brahms--or for that matter in music--can read with a good deal of pleasure, to say nothing of profit. It combines a thoroughgoing analysis of Brahms's Second Symphony (which Brinkmann shows is by no means so cheerful as it is usually touted to be) with a searching exploration of cultural and psychological themes. A masterly work. -- Peter Gay
Reinhold Brinkmann is Ditson Professor of Music at Harvard University.
Late Idyll is not only a superlative study of Brahms but an
indispensable study of nineteenth-century genre. -- Charles
Rosen
[Late Idyll] should be required reading, not only for
listeners and students but for conductors as well...In Brinkmann's
hands, [Brahms's Second Symphony] takes its rightful place in
intellectual and social history. -- Leon Botstein * Times Literary
Supplement *
Mr. Brinkmann's monograph is a loving look at Brahms as exemplar of
the melancholic temperament...[His book is] technical, but makes
reasonable leaps from technical observations to aesthetic claims.
That may be the only way to understand music in words: Immerse
oneself in it, learn its jargon and come out the other side hearing
connections previously only guessed at. -- Kenneth LaFave *
Washington Times *
Brinkmann guides the reader carefully through the entire
composition, pausing occasionally to examine a detail here and
there. He attractively combines analytical, hermeneutic,
biographical, and historical material, relating the symphony to
Brahm's other works and to those of his contemporaries and
predecessors (particularly Beethoven), and making frequent
reference to the cultural milieu of late 19th century Europe. *
Choice *
Reinhold Brinkmann's Late Idyll is that rare book by a
musicologist that anyone seriously interested in Brahms--or for
that matter in music--can read with a good deal of pleasure, to say
nothing of profit. It combines a thoroughgoing analysis of Brahms's
Second Symphony (which Brinkmann shows is by no means so cheerful
as it is usually touted to be) with a searching exploration of
cultural and psychological themes. A masterly work. -- Peter Gay
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |