Choral Masterworks: A Listener's GuideMichael Steinberg's highly successful listener's guides--The Symphony and The Concerto--have been universally praised for their blend of captivating biography, crystal clear musical analysis, and delightful humor. Now Steinberg follows these two greatly admired volumes with Choral Masterworks, the only such guide available to this most popular of musical forms. Here are more than fifty illuminating essays on the classic choral masterworks, ranging from Handel's Messiah, Bach's Mass in B Minor, and Beethoven's Missa solemnis, to works by Haydn, Brahms, Mendelssohn, and many others. Steinberg spans the entire history of classical music, from such giants of the Romantic era as Verdi and Berlioz, to leading modern composers such as Elgar, Rachmaninoff, Vaughan Williams, and Stravinsky, to contemporary masters such as John Adams and Charles Wuorinen. For each piece, Steinberg includes a fascinating biographical account of the work's genesis, often spiced with wonderful asides. The author includes an astute musical analysis of each piece, one that casual music lovers can easily appreciate and that more serious fans will find invaluable. The book also provides basic information such as the various movements of the work, the organization of the chorus and orchestra, and brief historical notes on early performances. More than twenty million Americans perform regularly in choirs or choruses. Choral Masterworks will appeal not only to concert goers and CD collectors, but also to this vast multitude of choral performers, an especially engaged and active community. "What sets Steinberg's writing apart is its appealing mixture of impregnable authority (he knows this music) and purely personal asides (by the end of the book, we know this man). Choral Masterworks can be read by anybody, from a professional musician to any young listener newly braced by the stoic pessimism of the Brahms 'German Requiem.'" --Washington Post Book World |
Contents
A Word to Nonbelieversand Believers | 3 |
ADAMS | 9 |
BACH | 16 |
BEETHOVEN | 45 |
BERLIOZ | 61 |
BRAHMS | 68 |
BRITTEN | 86 |
CHERUBINI | 97 |
JANÁCEK | 186 |
KODÁLY | 194 |
MENDELSSOHN | 200 |
MOZART | 210 |
ORFF | 230 |
RACHMANINOFF | 238 |
SCHMIDT | 243 |
SESSIONS | 252 |
DALLAPICCOLA | 104 |
DVORÁK | 113 |
ELGAR | 119 |
FAURÉ | 131 |
HANDEL | 138 |
HAYDN | 155 |
HONEGGER | 177 |
STRAVINSKY | 257 |
TIPPETT | 280 |
VAUGHAN WILLIAMS | 288 |
VERDI | 301 |
WALTON | 311 |
WUORINEN | 317 |
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Common terms and phrases
Agnus alto aria Bach Bach’s baritone bass bassoons beautiful Beethoven begins Berlioz Brahms Brahms’s C-Minor cantata Carmina burana cellos Cherubini choral chord church clarinets composer composer’s concert conductor contrabassoon Credo cymbals Dallapiccola death Dies irae Dream of Gerontius drum duet Dvorák E-flat Elgar Elijah English horn Fauré final flutes four horns fugue German Gerontius Gloria Handel harmony harp Haydn hear heard hymn Janácˇek Jesus Kyrie later Leipzig libretto Lord major Mass melody Mendelssohn Messiah minor Missa solemnis mixed chorus move movement Mozart numbers oboes opera oratorio performance Perséphone piano piece poem prayer Psalm quartet recitative Requiem Saint Matthew Passion Sancta Civitas Sanctus score sing singers solo soloists song sonority soprano sound Stravinsky strings sung Süssmayr Symphony tempo tenor three trombones timpani tion Tippett trombones trumpets tuba Vaughan Williams Verdi Verdi’s Vienna violas violins voices War Requiem Whitman woodwinds words writing written wrote