Giacomo Meyerbeer: A Critical Life and Iconography

Author:   Robert Ignatius Letellier
Publisher:   Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Edition:   Unabridged edition
ISBN:  

9781527568402


Pages:   732
Publication Date:   28 April 2021
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Giacomo Meyerbeer: A Critical Life and Iconography


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Author:   Robert Ignatius Letellier
Publisher:   Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Imprint:   Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Edition:   Unabridged edition
ISBN:  

9781527568402


ISBN 10:   1527568407
Pages:   732
Publication Date:   28 April 2021
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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This reviewer suspects that most Meyerbeer 'opera buffs', will be familiar with a basic outline of his life and the dating of the openings of his main grand operas. The author goes further and embraces much of Meyerbeer's less well known music. But there is so much more in this very fine biography, whose scholarship is immediately apparent from Letellier's consideration of his sources. This is a Critical Life, which has to take account of the music for which he dedicated his life, but also the man. General historians should also find this book of interest, through a musical perspective, of the international liberal bourgeois elite of the Western Europe of Meyerbeer's lifetime. Ian Rogers The major section of the book uses selected extracts from the diaries, with linking commentary, to create a chronological narrative of Meyerbeer's life. It must have been a mammoth task to select appropriate extracts that would give a rounded picture of the composer: his compositional methods, his operas and their reception, his relations with other musicians and contemporaries, and his character; to link them seamlessly with explanatory comment, and to meld the whole into one volume. Robert Letellier has done this. [...] I recommend this volume to anyone who wants to know more about Meyerbeer and his operas. Amazon Review This is a remarkable book, a groundbreaking book, a great book, an essential book for anybody with an interest in classical music or European high culture during the nineteenth century. For too long Meyerbeer has languished in limbo, a shadowy figure eclipsed and outshone by Richard Wagner. It was not ever thus. In the mid-nineteenth century there was an accepted consensus that whereas music's Rafael was Mozart, its Michelangelo was Meyerbeer. Meyerbeer, not Beethoven, was music's supreme icon. Paul Dawson-Bowling


The year 2014-the 150th anniversary of Giacomo Meyerbeer's death-saw the publication of two important biographies in German. Now, Robert Ignatius Letellier, arguably the composer's most ardent champion in the English-speaking world, has added this substantial volume to the long list of his publications about Meyerbeer [...] Always following Meyerbeer's letters and diaries, which he complements with contemporary press cuttings and multiple other testimonies, everything copiously commented upon, Letellier offers invaluable insights into Meyerbeer's creative processes, and also into his dealings with the practicalities of theatre life. [...] Letellier writes enthusiastically and presents his material with a light touch that makes his book a fascinating read. [...] Letellier's painstakingly researched book is set to become the standard English-language biography of the 19th century's most successful opera composer. Carlos Maria SolareOpera, May, 2021 This reviewer suspects that most Meyerbeer 'opera buffs', will be familiar with a basic outline of his life and the dating of the openings of his main grand operas. The author goes further and embraces much of Meyerbeer's less well known music. But there is so much more in this very fine biography, whose scholarship is immediately apparent from Letellier's consideration of his sources. This is a Critical Life, which has to take account of the music for which he dedicated his life, but also the man. General historians should also find this book of interest, through a musical perspective, of the international liberal bourgeois elite of the Western Europe of Meyerbeer's lifetime. Ian Rogers The major section of the book uses selected extracts from the diaries, with linking commentary, to create a chronological narrative of Meyerbeer's life. It must have been a mammoth task to select appropriate extracts that would give a rounded picture of the composer: his compositional methods, his operas and their reception, his relations with other musicians and contemporaries, and his character; to link them seamlessly with explanatory comment, and to meld the whole into one volume. Robert Letellier has done this. [...] I recommend this volume to anyone who wants to know more about Meyerbeer and his operas. Amazon Review This is a remarkable book, a groundbreaking book, a great book, an essential book for anybody with an interest in classical music or European high culture during the nineteenth century. For too long Meyerbeer has languished in limbo, a shadowy figure eclipsed and outshone by Richard Wagner. It was not ever thus. In the mid-nineteenth century there was an accepted consensus that whereas music's Rafael was Mozart, its Michelangelo was Meyerbeer. Meyerbeer, not Beethoven, was music's supreme icon. Paul Dawson-Bowling


Author Information

Robert Ignatius Letellier was educated in Grahamstown, Cambridge, Salzburg, Rome and Jerusalem. He is a member of Trinity College, Cambridge, the Meyerbeer Institute Schloss Thurnau at the University of Bayreuth, Germany, the Salzburg Centre for Research in the Early English Novel, the Maryvale Institute, Birmingham, and the Institute of Continuing Education at Madingley Hall, University of Cambridge. His publications number over 100 items, including books and articles on the late-seventeenth-, eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century novel (particularly the Gothic novel and Sir Walter Scott), the Bible (the Abraham Cycle, covenant, narrative theology, and homiletics), and European culture. He has specialized in the Romantic opera, especially the work of Giacomo Meyerbeer, and has also written on Daniel-François-Esprit Auber, the Opéra-Comique, Ludwig Minkus and the Romantic Ballet, and the Operetta.

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