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Louis Moreau Gottschalk (Music in American Life)
 
 
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Louis Moreau Gottschalk (Music in American Life) [Englisch] [Taschenbuch]

S. Frederick Starr


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Pressestimmen

"At last! Thanks to S. Frederick Starr, we now have a well-researched biography of the fabulous Louis Moreau Gottschalk, America's first great pianist, first classical music matinee idol, and first nationalistic composer. Mr. Starr brings the man and his period vividly to life." -- Harold C. Schonberg, former senior music critic of the New York Times "[Starr] offers the broadest picture yet of one of the most important nineteenth-century musicians, American or otherwise. Having scrupulously sifted through the extravagant and hazy Gottschalk mythology, Starr has written an engrossing, well-documented, and generously illustrated book." -- Choice "In this magesterial biography, Starr ... makes an eloquent case for Gottschalk as the first great musical democrat, a man who might well have changed the course of American music had he lived longer." -- Publishers Weekly

Kurzbeschreibung

"Innovating American composer, virtuoso pianist, and swashbuckling Romantic hero, Louis Moreau Gottschalk produced immensely popular works combining the French, Hispanic, and African influences of his native New Orleans. Many of his syncopated compositions anticipated ragtime by half a century. S. Frederick Starr's biography, originally published as "Bamboula!", is the most extensive chronicle available of Gottschalk's eventful life. Starr examines Gottshalk's music, his frenetic life on the road, his virtuosity as a performer, his effect on his audiences, and the scandals surrounding his romantic dalliances. He also reveals a generous and compassionate man who sponsored a host of young musicians and provided financial support for his many siblings."

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IT was Sunday, December 19, 1869, in Rio de Janeiro, and the body of Louis Moreau Gottschalk lay in state in the unornamented rooms of the Philharmonic Society at 41 Rua da Constituicao. Lesen Sie die erste Seite
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11 von 12 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
Precurser of Jazz Rediscovered 21. Dezember 2000
Von Ein Kunde - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Taschenbuch
Here, for the first time, is a full biography of America's first great composer who, in the 1850s, anticipated ragtime and jazz by half a century. Meticulously researched and written in a lively and accessible style,the biography details the colorful life of an American original and the trail-blazing father of music in New Orleans. Of interest to anyone interested in Civil War era America or the cultural environment that gave rise to one of America's most original and authentic musics.
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Badly flawed and poorly research book 14. November 2009
Von Serge Berthier - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Taschenbuch
L.M Gottschalk has always been ill-treated by the American musicologists and scholars, and this book is no better than the previous biographies of the musician.

The book is badly flawed, and this time Frederick Starr has no excuse. When Vernon Loggins wrote "Where the words end" in the 1950s, the first ever attempt to a serious biography of Gottschalk, he was desperately searching for the notebooks and letters of the musician. He suspected that they should be somewhere, but could not find them. They appear in the early 1980s, thanks to the tenacity of Robert Oggerfeld, who was a collector of memorabilia of the pianist. They are currently in the New York Library but Starr did not consult them probably because he discovered that Gottschalk writes in French to his family (even letters to his father, when Gottschalk is ten years old, are in French).

Musicologists in the U.S want Gottschalk to be the first known American composer, so they go to great lengths to have biographies focused on the American years of the wandering pianist. Starr published his book in 2000. In 1985, the first French book about Gottschalk, using all the letters discovered in the 1980s, revealed that the mother of Gottschalk was a Brusley de Beaubert. Her grand-father was the first judge of Nouvelle-Orleans. Gottschalk was sent to Paris when ten, to live with his cousins: the Fauque de Jonquières. That well-connected aristocratic family pathed the way for Gottschalk to be received at the Spanish court, where Liszt, a commoner, could not.

There is no mention in Starr's biography of this family background and he can't even get the name of Gottschalk's mother right. He also keep calling Gottschalk, Louis-Moreau, which was its stage name, but who was only Moreau for his friends and his sisters.

It is this exceptional family background that explains the unravelling of Gottschalk. When his father, a speculator on the cotton market, lose all his fortune and dies soon after, the family, who was then in Paris with no intention to return to Louisana cannot keep its social rank among the aristocracy. For the sake of appearance, Gottschalk advises his mother, not to lose face, to retire in the South of France, where a Brusley de Beaubert still lives. She refuses.

Gottschalk's sisters could not marry anymore in their social sphere (they were going to flee social disgrace by going to London where a Fauque de Jonquières has exiled himself for political reason. It is the start of Napoleon III reign and the old the aristocracy is a fierce opponent of the Prince-President soon to become Emperor ).

Gottschalk who was in New York for what was supposed to be a short stay of three months became stranded in a country where he had no intention to live.

Frederick Starr's book surfs on those events. He only repeats what Vernon Loggins wrote 50 years before. As for the South American years, for which there are now many letters, not yet translated into English, Starr commits the same error to follow Vernon loggins' book and assumptions. My conclusion: if you want to know what kind of man Gottschalk was and why he never returned to Europe, you should read the French book (so far not available in English) and if you want to write about Gottschalk you should be fluent in French, Spanish and English. It is clearly not the case of Frederick Starr.

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