Book description
A decade after the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars had
given way to an era of retrenchment and repression, 1824 became a
watershed year. The premiere of the Ninth Symphony, the death of Lord
Byron - who had been aiding the Greeks in their struggle for
independence, Delacroix's painting of the Turkish massacre of Greeks
at Chios and Pushkin's anti-tyrannical play Boris Godunov all
signalled that the desire for freedom was not dead. And all of these
works and events were part of the flowering of the High Romantic
period. In The Ninth, eminent music historian and biographer Harvey
Sachs employs memoir, anecdote and his vast knowledge of history to
explain how the premiere of Beethoven's staggering last symphony was
emblematic of its time - a work of art unlike any other - and a
magisterial, humanistic statement that remains a challenge down to our
own day and for future generations.
Harvey Sachs is a writer and music historian. His most recent
work is The Letters of Arturo Toscanini, and he assisted Plácido
Domingo and Sir Georg Solti with their memoirs. He has written for
many major journals and newspapers including the Times Literary
Supplement, Guardian, Gramophone, BBC Music Magazine, New Yorker and
the New York Times.