Music and Desire among the Austro-German Romantics

Music and Desire among the Austro-German Romantics

Beethoven, Schubert, Wagner, Brahms, and the Schumanns

$120.00

Publication Date: 17th June 2025

Investigates the composition and reception of works by key Romantics such as Beethoven, Schubert, Brahms, Wagner and the Schumanns with attention to the role of sexual desire in the composers' lives... Read More
0 in stock
Investigates the composition and reception of works by key Romantics such as Beethoven, Schubert, Brahms, Wagner and the Schumanns with attention to the role of sexual desire in the composers' lives... Read More
Description
Investigates the composition and reception of works by key Romantics such as Beethoven, Schubert, Brahms, Wagner and the Schumanns with attention to the role of sexual desire in the composers' lives and music.


Scholars have for several decades been devoting increasing attention to aspects of sexuality and desire in the music of the Austro-German Romantics. Undertaking a close analysis of the sources, the four chapters of this book show how our assumptions about what those composers desired are often in fact contingent on what we, their commentators, have wanted them to desire over the course of reception history. Beethoven's Fidelio and Schubert's Winterreise tend to be regarded as a hymn to freedom, on the one hand, and an interior monologue of an alienated lover, on the other, though in neither case does such a view correspond to what the composer intended. In contrast, Richard Wagner dismissed his own opera The Ban on Love as a youthful indiscretion extolling the "free love" of the Young German movement; but he was reinterpreting an early work to align it with his later aesthetic.

The final chapter examines the chronology of the friendship of Robert and Clara Schumann and Johannes Brahms in order to discern the likely truths about their triangular relationship before and after Robert Schumann's incarceration in a mental asylum. By adhering to the sources and placing them in the social, linguistic, and geographical contexts of their time, author Chris Walton grants all these protagonists a greater agency of desire than has hitherto been the case.
Details
  • Price: $120.00
  • Pages: 288
  • Carton Quantity: 20
  • Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
  • Imprint: University of Rochester Press
  • Series: ISSN
  • Publication Date: 17th June 2025
  • Trim Size: 6 x 9 in
  • Illustration Note: 25 music exx. and 11 b/w illus.
  • ISBN: 9781648251108
  • Format: Hardcover
  • BISACs:
    MUSIC / Individual Composer & Musician
    MUSIC / Genres & Styles / Classical
    MUSIC / History & Criticism
    SOCIAL SCIENCE / Gender Studies
Author Bio
CHRIS WALTON teaches music history at the Basel Academy of Music in Switzerland, is an Honorary Professor at Africa Open Institute (Stellenbosch University in South Africa) and runs a research project at the Bern Academy of the Arts for the Swiss National Science Foundation.
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction

1. Hope for Ludwig in Leonore's never-land
2. The lonely passions of Schubert's winter swagman
3. Banns of love: bourgeois longings in Wagner's Das Liebesverbot
4. The talented Mr. Brahms, Clara's fullest friend

Afterword
Bibliography
Index
Investigates the composition and reception of works by key Romantics such as Beethoven, Schubert, Brahms, Wagner and the Schumanns with attention to the role of sexual desire in the composers' lives and music.


Scholars have for several decades been devoting increasing attention to aspects of sexuality and desire in the music of the Austro-German Romantics. Undertaking a close analysis of the sources, the four chapters of this book show how our assumptions about what those composers desired are often in fact contingent on what we, their commentators, have wanted them to desire over the course of reception history. Beethoven's Fidelio and Schubert's Winterreise tend to be regarded as a hymn to freedom, on the one hand, and an interior monologue of an alienated lover, on the other, though in neither case does such a view correspond to what the composer intended. In contrast, Richard Wagner dismissed his own opera The Ban on Love as a youthful indiscretion extolling the "free love" of the Young German movement; but he was reinterpreting an early work to align it with his later aesthetic.

The final chapter examines the chronology of the friendship of Robert and Clara Schumann and Johannes Brahms in order to discern the likely truths about their triangular relationship before and after Robert Schumann's incarceration in a mental asylum. By adhering to the sources and placing them in the social, linguistic, and geographical contexts of their time, author Chris Walton grants all these protagonists a greater agency of desire than has hitherto been the case.
  • Price: $120.00
  • Pages: 288
  • Carton Quantity: 20
  • Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
  • Imprint: University of Rochester Press
  • Series: ISSN
  • Publication Date: 17th June 2025
  • Trim Size: 6 x 9 in
  • Illustrations Note: 25 music exx. and 11 b/w illus.
  • ISBN: 9781648251108
  • Format: Hardcover
  • BISACs:
    MUSIC / Individual Composer & Musician
    MUSIC / Genres & Styles / Classical
    MUSIC / History & Criticism
    SOCIAL SCIENCE / Gender Studies
CHRIS WALTON teaches music history at the Basel Academy of Music in Switzerland, is an Honorary Professor at Africa Open Institute (Stellenbosch University in South Africa) and runs a research project at the Bern Academy of the Arts for the Swiss National Science Foundation.
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction

1. Hope for Ludwig in Leonore's never-land
2. The lonely passions of Schubert's winter swagman
3. Banns of love: bourgeois longings in Wagner's Das Liebesverbot
4. The talented Mr. Brahms, Clara's fullest friend

Afterword
Bibliography
Index