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An Artist's Journey : Lettres d'un Bachelier es Musique, 1835-41

Liszt, FranzSuttoni, Charles(Translated by)Suttoni, Charles(Volume editor)
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In these eloquent and intensely personal writings, Franz Liszt sketches the cities, people, and scenes of his travels in the 1830s and explores ideas about art and its ideal place in the world.

During six years of wandering through Switzerland, France, Italy, Austria, and Germany (four of them together with Countess Marie d'Agoult), the composer saw the greatest art and most fabulous landscapes of Europe and crossed paths with celebrated singers and artists, renowned intellectuals, infamous socialites, and both reigning and deposed aristocracy.

The article/essays that emerged from this period are both public and private: though written for the Paris press, they are the closest that Liszt came to autobiography.

Some of these writings are travel articles; some are essentially reports of a music correspondent; still others are personal and confessional; and some are really essays on the nature of art.

All offer precious insight into the musical, social, and intellectual life in the major European capitals seen through the eyes of one of the most well-read and influential musical personalities of the period.

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Product Details
University of Chicago Press
0226485102 / 9780226485102
Hardback
780.92
01/07/1989
United States
288 pages, 20 halftones
154 x 278 mm, 679 grams
Professional & Vocational/Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly/Undergraduate Learn More