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Chapter 39 - Mythmaking

from Part V - Reception and Legacy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 May 2019

Natasha Loges
Affiliation:
Royal College of Music, London
Katy Hamilton
Affiliation:
Royal College of Music, London
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Summary

During his lifetime, Brahms witnessed a veritable explosion in biographical writing and related publications of letters, memoirs and diaries. The monumental Allgemeine deutsche Biographie (1875–1912) was edited by Rochus von Liliencron (1820–1912), a personal acquaintance of his; a comparable project in Great Britain was the Dictionary of National Biography (1885–1900). Significant biographies of famous Austro-German composers also appeared in those years, often written by Brahms’s friends: Otto Jahn’s Mozart (1856–9), Friedrich Chrysander’s Handel (1858–67), Philipp Spitta’s Bach (1873–80) and Carl Ferdinand Pohl’s Haydn (1875–82). But one might also think of the biography of Beethoven (1866–79) by the American Alexander Wheelock Thayer, a project which was taken up in German by Hermann Deiters, Jahn’s pupil and Brahms’s colleague and contemporary. It was Deiters who in 1880 wrote the first book-length biography of Brahms, when the composer still had seventeen years to live.

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Chapter
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Brahms in Context , pp. 384 - 392
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2019

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References

Further Reading

Avins, S., ‘The Young Brahms: Biographical Data Reexamined’, 19th-Century Music 24/3 (Spring 2001), 276–89Google Scholar
Desai, B., ‘The Boy Brahms’, 19th-Century Music 27/2 (Fall 2003), 132–6CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hofmann, K., ‘Sehnsucht habe ich immer nach Hamburg …’: Johannes Brahms und seine Vaterstadt: Legende und Wirklichkeit (Reinbek: Dialog-Verlag, 2003)Google Scholar
Musgrave, M.Frei aber Froh: A Reconsideration’, 19th-Century Music 3/3 (March 1980), 251–8CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Swafford, J., ‘Did the Young Brahms Play Piano in Waterfront Bars?’, 19th-Century Music 24/3 (Spring 2001), 268–75CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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