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Author Burgess, Anthony, 1917-1993.

Title This man and music / Anthony Burgess.

Imprint New York : McGraw-Hill, ©1983.

Copies

Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe Kansas Collection CA Martin  823.914 B912Bb3 1983    ---  Lib Use Only
Description 192 pages : music ; 22 cm
text txt rdacontent
unmediated n rdamedia
volume nc rdacarrier
Summary Anthony Burgess was the author of over 50 books, including his best known novel, "A Clockwork Orange." But Burgess always emphasized music as the ruling passion in his creative life. Largely self-taught in music, Burgess composed his first symphony before he was twenty, many years before his first novel, and he was the composer of over 65 musical works. In these deeply insightful meditations, the renowned writer explores the meaning of music, the intention of the composer and the process of composition, and the seemingly elusive relationships between literature and music. Burgess shows how "the process of literary composition are revealed by the writers themselves" and then gathers evidence to understand the "inexplicable magic" of the details of the operation of music what is music's "intelligibility"? From Shakespeare to the lyric verse of Gerard Manley Hopkins, from the modernists T.S. Eliot and James Joyce to the modern lyricists Lorenz Hart and Stephen Sondheim, Burgess reveals how prose writers have struggled to tap the inherent musicality of their material. This treasured classic, at last back in print, provides a fascinating perspective on the mutually enriching relationship of these two creative arts by a man who mastered them both.
Subject Burgess, Anthony, 1917-1993.
Burgess, Anthony, 1917-1993 (OCoLC)fst00029102
Music and literature.
Music -- Philosophy and aesthetics.
Music and literature. (OCoLC)fst01030479
Music -- Philosophy and aesthetics. (OCoLC)fst01030408
ISBN 0070089647
9780070089648

 
    
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