From Grieg to Brahms: Studies of Some Modern Composers and Their Art

From Grieg to Brahms: Studies of Some Modern Composers and Their Art[Pg 3] I INTRODUCTION THE APPRECIATION...
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Author: Mason, Daniel Gregory,1873-1953
Format: eBook
Language: English
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From Grieg to Brahms: Studies of Some Modern Composers and Their Art

From Grieg to Brahms: Studies of Some Modern Composers and Their Art

€6,25

From Grieg to Brahms: Studies of Some Modern Composers and Their Art

€6,25
Author: Mason, Daniel Gregory,1873-1953
Format: eBook
Language: English

From Grieg to Brahms: Studies of Some Modern Composers and Their Art

[Pg 3] I INTRODUCTION THE APPRECIATION OF MUSIC However interesting may be the study of an art through the personalities of the artists who have produced it, and such study, since art is a mode of human expression, is indeed essential, it must be supplemented by at least some general knowledge of the long continuous evolution in which the work of the most brilliant individual is but a moment, a phase. The quality of a man's work in art, and especially, as will be seen in a moment, in music, depends not alone on the depth of his character and the force of his talent, but also largely on the technical resources he owes to others, on the means for expressing himself that he finds ready to his hand. Whatever his personal powers or limitations, the value of his work will be determined [Pg 4] not more by these than by the helps and hindrances of his artistic inheritance. The great edifice of art, in fact, is like those Gothic cathedrals on which generations of men successively labored; thousands of common workmen hewed their foundation stones; finer minds, architects, smiths, brass founders, glass makers and sculptors, wrought and decorated the superstructures; and the work of each, whatever his personal skill and devotion, was valuable only because it built upon and added to that of all the rest. The soaring spires are firmly based on blocks of stone ploddingly adjusted; the windows, often of such a perfect beauty that they seem created rather than constructed, had nevertheless to be built up bit by bit; and all the marvelous organism of pillars, arches and buttresses is so delicately solid, so precariously stable, that had one stress been miscalculated, one joint inaccurately made, the whole would collapse. So it is with the edifice of art, and particularly with that of music, which depends for its very material on the labors of musicians. Pigments, clay, marble, the materials of the plastic arts, exist already in the world; but the whole ladder of fixed tones on which [Pg 5] music is built is the product of man's sthetic sense, and had to be created slowly and laboriously by many generations of men. The successions of chords which every banjo player strums in his accompaniments were the subject of long trial by the medival composers. The hymn tune that any boy can write is modeled on a symmetrical scheme of phrases developed by countless experimenters. It took men centuries to select and arrange the eight tones of the ordinary scale, and centuries more to learn how to combine them in chords. And the most eloquent modern works depend on this long evolution of resources just as inevitably as the Gothic spire rests on the hewn stones so carefully laid. In the art, as in the cathedral, the seen rests upon the unseen, the beautiful upon the solid, the complex upon the simple, the new upon the old. The product of a thousand artists, music is as dependent on each as the coral reef on the tiny indispensable body of each insect; and on the other hand the individual musician, whatever his ability, is great only as he uses the equipment his fellows have preparedthe greatest is the most indebted man. ......Buy Now (To Read More)

Product details

Ebook Number: 58562
Author: Mason, Daniel Gregory
Release Date: Dec 29, 2018
Format: eBook
Language: English

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