Music
Nellie: The life and loves of Dame Nellie Melba by Robert Wainwright
Long Players: Writers on the albums that shaped them edited by Tom Gatti
Wagnerism: Art and politics in the shadow of music by Alex Ross
The Oxford Companion to Australian Music edited by Warren Bebbington
Those of us who work in classical music will be familiar with the accusation that our chosen art form lacks contemporary social relevance. It is one with a long pedigree. ‘Sonata, what do you want of me?’ asked an exasperated Fontenelle in 1751, according to Rousseau. But you will find no widespread or heightened disdain for worldly affairs among classical musicians on the whole. Rather, any apparent reticence they may have describing how their art connects with the world at large stems from the fact that it is notoriously difficult to do. As the well-known quip goes, ‘Writing about music is like dancing about architecture.’ This is not a love that dare not speak its name so much as one that struggles to be put into words at all.
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