Book description
Camille Saint-Saëns began as a child prodigy and was acclaimed in
his lifetime as the incarnation of French genius. His was one of the
longest careers in musical history, stretching from the traditions of
Beethoven to the innovations of the twentieth century, including one
of the earliest film scores. As a virtuoso pianist he achieved
international fame, while Liszt proclaimed him the world's greatest
organist. A prolific composer, there is much more to him than his
best-known work, the witty Carnival of the Animals, of which he
forbade performances in his lifetime. Among his most notable
achievements are the opera Samson et Delila and the Organ Symphony,
while the Danse Macabre, second piano concerto and first cello
concerto remain much loved. As a young man, he supported the 'new
music' of Liszt, Wagner and Berlioz and introduced the symphonic poem
into French music. He championed an up-and-coming generation of French
composers, most notably Fauré, and played a unique part in
transforming French taste from grand opera and operetta to the
classical forms of symphony and chamber music, at the same time
reviving interest in the music of Bach and Rameau. His personal life
was combative, tragic and surrounded by rumour: as a boy during the
Revolution of 1848, serving as a National Guard in the war of 1870,
and eventually becoming something of an icon of the Third Republic,
used in diplomacy as a symbol of French culture. This fascinating book
(Chatto & Windus 1999) places his long and controversial career in
a turbulent period when music, no less than politics, was undergoing
sensational and often stormy change.
Brian Rees was born in Sydney, Australia, but educated at the Bede
Grammar School, Sunderland. He was a Scholar of Trinity College,
Cambridge, and as a History Master at Eton College, he collaborated with
the satirist, the late John Wells, on a musical version of Aristophanes'
Birds. He has been Headmaster of three public schools: Merchant
Taylors', Charterhouse, and Rugby, and is the biographer of Sir Edward
German and editor of the papers of Sir Robert Birley. He now lives in
the village of Flore in Northamptonshire."