Available Formats
Paperback, Main
Published: 11th December 2008
Paperback, Main
Published: 11th December 2008
Paperback, Main
Published: 11th December 2008
Sibelius Volume I: 1865-1905
By (Author) Erik Tawaststjerna
Translated by Robert Layton
Faber & Faber
Faber & Faber
11th December 2008
Main
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Composers and songwriters
Art music, orchestral and formal music
780.92
Paperback
344
Width 153mm, Height 234mm, Spine 25mm
517g
Erik Tawaststjerna embarked on his authoritative study of Sibelius in 1960 and occupied him for over a quarter of a century. His book differs from other work on the composer in one important respect: he had unrestricted access to the composers papers, diaries and letters as well as the advantage of numerous conversations with the composers widow and other members of the family. Thus his researches can justifiably claim to have thrown entirely fresh light on the great Finnish composer. Far from the remote personality of the Sibelius legend, Sibelius emerges as a highly colourful figure. Translated by Robert Layton, himself a Sibelius specialist, this first volume (the first of three) takes us up to the period of the Second Symphony and the Violin Concerto, with perceptive and searching studies of the music including a number of early works, The Burning of the Boat, the Kullervo Symphony and the two versions of En Saga. A remarkable and deeply impressive book. The English text unquestionably succeeds in giving a subtle and scholarly rendering of a profound study of Sibelius and his music. Economist
Erik Tawaststjerna (1916-93) devoted a lifetime to the study of Sibelius, and came to know him personally. After Sibelius's death in l957 he was given unrestricted access to the composer's papers. Tawaststjerna's three-volume study of Sibelius was awarded the prestigious Finlandia Prize and has been hailed as definitive. Robert Layton was the Music Talks Producer for the BBC Third Programme and then Radio 3, and is the author of the standard English study of Sibelius in the Master Musicians series He was awarded the Finnish State Literary Prize in l985 for his translation of the first two volumes of Tawaststjerna's Sibelius, and was subsequently made a Knight of the Order of the White Rose of Finland for his work on the composer