Review
"'There is music in the air, music all around us... and you simply take as much as you require.' Edward Elgar"
Written by a biographer of Elgar, this book is more of a life story of his works, much loved by audiences and epitomising a nostalgic rural and English ideal of music. Self taught as a musician and composer, the story of Elgar's internal struggle to express and achieve his creative impulse an overcome the limits of those with a similar provincial start in life is analysed in terms of harmonic tensions and resolutions in some of his best known pieces. The search for expressive melody as a means to convey inner longings and spiritual convictions is clear in Elgar's music. Yet the restrictions of commissions and conditions of life create a composer's lifetime's search to write compositions which matches the kind of music he dreams of: in Elgar's case, a pure ideal of "absolute music", which refers to nothing other than itself, and yet evokes thoughts and feelings within the audience of their own journey through life. This emotional intensity and psychological insight makes Edgar's music just as potent to contemporary audiences, as evidenced by the continual inclusion in concert repertoire of such stalwarts as the Violin and Cello Concertos and Symphonies, among other works. Edgar's own struggle with depression, his love and affinity with the countryside, and the context of the changing Edwardian times with the coming of the First World War, are all insights which add depth and meaning to the beauty of his orchestral creations. "Child of Dreams" however would not be a book for those unitiated into the Elgarian canon. But for those who love elgar, this is an insightful read even for those with no musical training, although perhaps with quite a lot of musical analysis to skim over.For musicians or those studying composition, there is useful analysis into recurrent themes, keys and quotations, although overall the book reads like an extended programme note. (Kirkus UK)
Product Description
'When Elgar's Cello Concerto reached my young ears fifty years ago across the seas in the United States, it transfixed me with its power to project a landscape I did not know. When knowledge came of Worcestershire, Elgar's projection proved strangely accurate. How could music do that?' Jerrold Northrop Moore pursues his quest for the essential Elgar and sets out the story of an extraordinarily creative life. It shows themes of childhood, fantasy and vision fusing into a mature style of nobility and nostalgia. Above all it links the composer to the English landscape that formed the backdrop to all of his work, from his earliest years. This powerful short book is the outcome of half a century's thought and reflection by a leading Elgar biographer.
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