The
Indispensable Composers: a Personal Guide (2018), examines the composers whom the
author Anthony Tommasini, a New York Times music critic, considers to be
the most important in Western music. It is also a kind of memoir in which Tommasini
recollects his musical education, first encounters with great works of music,
his favorite professors, the performers such as Rudolph Serkin who have
influenced him. The book is self-indulgent in this regard, but the personal information give the book an additional layer of interest. Tommasini devotes each chapter to a different composer or group of composers. There's a certain free-form skipping about as he moves from personal anecdotes to music by the composers to biographical details. Most of those details come from biographies which he scrupulously acknowledges. The most significant omission among the composers, I thought, was Gustav
Mahler, who is mentioned a few times and whose omission, Tommasini does not
excuse. There are no great revelations here. The book introduces us to the
lives of these composers and their music. You can use it as a guide for
listening, or not.
I've
often found in music criticism, and this book is no exception, that there is no
good way to describe music in words. One can talk about the key in which a work
is written, the time signature, the dynamics, the tempo. One can point out where
the violins enter or the horn section begins to diminish. But there is no way,
I think, to replicate in words the effects of music.
This
book would have been more useful had a set of CDs including the works Tommasini
discusses accompanied it.
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