1st Edition

Selected Writings of Max Reger

By Christopher Anderson Copyright 2006
    184 Pages
    by Routledge

    182 Pages
    by Routledge

    Max Reger (1873-1916) was a celebrated German composer, performer on piano and organ, and conductor. Well known for his compositions for keyboards and orchestra, Reger worked during the crucial decades when Western music transformed itself from the misty veil of Romanticism and Impressionism to the more hard-edged modernism that would prevail in the 20th century. Less well known are his writings about music and the composer's craft. Although he wrote a major book on music theory published in 1903 (and translated into English a year later), his extended essays on composition, his fellow composers, and analysis have never appeared before in English. Christopher Anderson, a noted Reger scholar, has gone back to original manuscripts as well as the published versions of these writings to produce definitive new texts. Additionally, Anderson has written an opening essay placing Reger's writings and music in the context of his time.

    This volume will appeal strongly to those interested in the Late Romantic era, musical composition and aesthetics, and of course those interested in the music and life of Reger

    Introduction; Part 1 Defense of the Beiträge zur Modulationslehre of 1903; Chapter 1 I Request the Floor!; Chapter 2 “More Light”; Part 2 The “Draeseke Controversy” of 1906; Chapter 3 Music and Progress; Chapter 4 An Open Letter; Chapter 5 Hugo Riemann: Degeneration and Regeneration in Music; Chapter 6 Degeneration and Regeneration in Music; Part 3 Reception; Chapter 7 Hugo Wolf's Artistic Legacy; Chapter 8 On April 1; Chapter 9 Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy's Songs Without Words; Chapter 10 ::, On Johann Sebastian Bach; Chapter 11 ::, On Richard Strauss; Part 4 “Analyses” of Reger's Works for the Festivals of the Allgemeiner Deutscher musikverein; Chapter 12 String Quartet op. 74 in D minor; Chapter 13 Variations and Fugue on a Theme of Joh. Seb. Bach for Piano, Two Hands op. 81; and Variations and Fugue on a Theme of Beethoven for Two Pianos, Four Hands op. 86; Chapter 14 Psalm 100 for Chorus, Orchestra, and Organ op. 106; Chapter 15 Quartet for Violin, Viola, Violoncello, and Piano op. 113; Chapter 16 Römischer Triumphgesang for Men's Chorus and Orchestra op. 126;

    Biography

    Christopher Anderson

    "This book is an important addition to the growing scholarship on Max Reger....[and] a very enlightening read."--NOTES