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Benjamin Britten: A Life in the Twentieth Century Hardcover – 28 Jan 2013

4.5 out of 5 stars 22 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 688 pages
  • Publisher: Allen Lane; First Edition edition (28 Jan. 2013)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1846142326
  • ISBN-13: 978-1846142321
  • Product Dimensions: 23.6 x 16.3 x 4.6 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 157,903 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Product Description

Review

Paul Kildea's superb biography gets closer to Benjamin Britten than any other. His deep insight into Britten's public and private life uncovers a troubled brilliance which has few parallels in twentieth-century music. This is a compelling, incisive, revelatory - and sometimes disturbing - book, both as musical commentary and as narrative (Colin Matthews, composer and former assistant to Benjamin Britten)

Paul Kildea has, perhaps against the odds, given us a compelling new Britten. Beautifully written, meticulously researched and with a professional's ear for the musical achievements, his compulsively readable new biography boasts an impressive historical sweep and - most important - an unflappable sensitivity to the complexities of his troubled subject. This is by far the best treatment of Britten and his music - and one of the best biographies of any composer - that I know (Roger Parker, Professor of Music, King's College, London)

This at last is the biography Britten deserves: engaged with the music and fascinated by the composer's place in his own times, Kildea presents a truly convincing portrait of a great artist (Ian Bostridge)

About the Author

Paul Kildea is a writer and conductor who has performed many of the Britten works he writes about, in opera houses and concert halls from Sydney to Hamburg. He has written extensively on the relationship between music and culture in the twentieth century: his previous books include Selling Britten (2002) and (as editor) Britten on Music (2003). He was Head of Music at the Aldeburgh Festival between 1999 and 2002 and subsequently Artistic Director of the Wigmore Hall in London. He lives in Berlin.


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Customer Reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
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Format: Hardcover
Having read a number of books about Britten's life and music, I wasn't quite sure what to expect of this. But having heard Paul Kildea at an author's talk at Daunt Books in London, I quickly realised this would have particular authority. Kildea is a musician and a PhD musicologist (2 things which don't always go hand-in-hand). Not only that, he has had experience of performance and running festivals. In particular, he was for many years head of Music for the Aldeburgh Festival (which means you can't get much closer to this source than that, in this generation at least).

This is not hagiography (unlike some books about Britten) - and is the better for it. There is nuance amidst the genuine and profound respect for the composer. Ben was notoriously prickly and prone to feuds - his inner circle sometimes shifting, often protecting him to enable him to compose (but in-so-doing, acquiescing to his occasionally appalling cruelty). And yet, despite this, here was a man with extraordinary humanity and conviction, which profoundly shaped his musical output. The pieces are described and engaged with from a performer's perspective as well as a musicologist. And as one who has had a little experience playing and singing Britten, these descriptions really resonated with me. Most significantly, reading this book has impelled me to dust off old recordings that I've not listened to for ages, now with greater insight and understanding.

As to the book's subtitle (A Life in the Twentieth Century), it is a curious choice. After all, it does seem rather redundant.
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Format: Hardcover
Warning: this review contains spoilers.

For any biographer of Benjamin Britten, there is an enormous amount of source material; much, inevitably, has to be omitted, and I think Kildea is right to employ such a selective process, otherwise this would have been a three volume biography. Such a methodology does mean that there are serious omissions. I would have liked more about the circumstances surrounding the composition and première of 'Paul Bunyan'. Brief reference is made to the composer's friendships with adolescent boys, but this is a subject that has been dealt with more fully elsewhere. We are not told enough about Peter Pears' role, good and bad, both from a personal aspect and the influence he had in developing Britten's compositions.

Elsewhere, Kildea displays a less than rigorous approach to the material he has chosen. He does not explain the origins of the commission for the ballet 'The Prince of the Pagodas' nor why, at this stage in his career (the 1950s), Britten agreed to compose a piece in a genre of which he had shown no previous demonstrable interest, or empathy. Kildea attempts to place Britten in the context of the British professional musical scene of whose standards the composer was so critical. He uses an example from fiction to describe the poverty of Britain's musical life in the 1930s: " ...the land of Mapp and Lucia, E.F.Benson's comic creations ...hosting musical soirées where the sole offering was the slow movement of Beethoven's 'Moonlight' Sonata. Britain just didn't know any better" (p46). Kildea should have researched this issue more; using a fictional yard-stick is reductive and lazy.
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
Two stumbling blocks seem to stand before biographers: venereal diseases and blaming of the partner. Kildea avoided none of them. In respect to the former, he made Britten rejoin the glorious company of Schubert, Wolf, a.o. In respect to the latter, he made Pears rejoin the no less famous company of the biographers' "bêtes noires" - Konstanze Mozart and Sophie von Kühn (Novalis's fiancée) come to mind. Kildea needed Pears's "bad behaviour" (based on a hearsay theory of one person who disliked him) to support his speculation about the venereal disease and further "bad influence" on Britten.
Now Britten's supposed disease has been rebutted by several of his doctors (Kildea's misfortune is that they are still alive) and the misrepresentation of Pears is contradicted by first hand sources like the six volumes of "Letters from a Life" and witnesses of people who knew him well (his and Britten's biographer Christopher Headington among others).

The main point about these errors and inaccuracies is that they cast doubt on Kildea's research or seriousness and therefore I can't really trust him as a biographer. Too bad, because the book is corrective of some of Carpenter's major flaws but it contains also, in addition to the main speculations, some misleading half-truths (e.g. some half-told stories which when complete - as they can be found in other books - share a different light on the narrated events).
Kildea's avowal of disliking Britten as a person gives him some apparent credit, but this too is a fashion among biographers: lest one be accused of hagiography, better say the music is good and the man not so good.
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