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Eduard Hanslick

Eduard Hanslick (11 September 1825 – 6 August 1904) was an Austrian music critic, aesthetician and historian.[1] Among the leading critics of his time, he was the chief music critic of the Neue Freie Presse from 1864 until the end of his life. His best known work, the 1854 treatise Vom Musikalisch-Schönen (On the Musically Beautiful), was a landmark in the aesthetics of music and outlines much of his artistic and philosophical beliefs on music.[2]

Eduard Hanslick
Portrait of Hanslick, published in 1894
Born(1825-09-11)11 September 1825
Died6 August 1904(1904-08-06) (aged 78)
Occupations

Hanslick was a conservative critic and championed absolute music over programmatic music for much of his career.[3] As such, he sided with and promoted the faction of Robert Schumann and Johannes Brahms in the so-called "War of the Romantics", often deriding the works of composers such as Franz Liszt and Richard Wagner.

Life and career edit

Eduard Hanslick was born in Prague (then in the Austrian Empire), the son of Joseph Adolph Hanslik, a bibliographer and music teacher from a German-speaking family, and one of Hanslik's piano pupils, the daughter of a Jewish merchant from Vienna. At the age of eighteen Hanslick went to study music with Václav Tomášek, one of Prague's renowned musicians. He also studied law at Prague University and obtained a degree in that field, but his amateur study of music eventually led to writing music reviews for small town newspapers, then the Wiener Musik-Zeitung and eventually the Neue Freie Presse, where he was music critic until retirement. Whilst still a student, in 1845, he met with Richard Wagner in Marienbad; the composer, noting the young man's enthusiasm, invited him to Dresden to hear his opera Tannhäuser; here Hanslick also met with Robert Schumann.[4]

 
Grave of Dr. Eduard Hanslick, Zentralfriedhof, Vienna

In 1854 he published his influential book On the Beautiful in Music. By this time his interest in Wagner had begun to cool; he had written a disparaging review of the first Vienna production of Lohengrin. From this point on, Hanslick found his sympathies moving away from the so-called 'music of the Future' associated with Wagner and Franz Liszt, and more towards music he conceived as directly descending from the traditions of Mozart, Beethoven and Schumann[5] — in particular the music of Johannes Brahms (who dedicated to him his set of waltzes opus 39 for piano duet). In 1869, in a revised edition of his essay Jewishness in Music, Wagner attacked Hanslick as 'of gracefully concealed Jewish origin', and asserted that his supposedly Jewish style of criticism was anti-German.[n 1] It is sometimes claimed that Wagner caricatured Hanslick in his opera Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg as the carping critic Beckmesser (whose name was originally to be Veit Hanslich).[7]

Hanslick's unpaid lectureship at the University of Vienna led in 1870 to a full professorship in history and aesthetic of music and later to a doctorate honoris causa.[1] Hanslick often served on juries for musical competitions and held a post at the Austrian Ministry of Culture and fulfilled other administrative roles. He retired after writing his memoirs, but still wrote articles on the most important premieres of the day, up to his death in 1904 in Baden.[citation needed]

Views on music edit

 
Eduard Hanslick offering incense to Brahms; cartoon from the Viennese satirical magazine, Figaro, 1890

Hanslick's tastes were conservative; in his memoirs he said that for him musical history really began with Mozart and culminated in Beethoven, Schumann and Brahms. He is best remembered today for his critical advocacy of Brahms as against the school of Wagner, an episode in 19th century music history sometimes called the War of the Romantics. The critic Richard Pohl, of the Neue Zeitschrift für Musik, represented the progressive composers of the "Music of the Future".

Being a close friend of Brahms from 1862, Hanslick possibly had some influence on Brahms's composing, often getting to hear new music before it was published.[8] Hanslick saw Wagner's reliance on dramatics and word painting as inimical to the nature of music, which he thought to be expressive solely by virtue of its form, and not through any extra-musical associations. On the other hand, he referred to extra-musicality when he asked, "When you play Chopin's mazurkas, do you not feel the mournful and oppressive air of the Battle of Ostroleka?" (Hanslick 1848, p. 157). The theoretical framework of Hanslick's criticism is expounded in his book of 1854, Vom Musikalisch-Schönen (On the Beautiful in Music), which started as an attack on the Wagnerian aesthetic and established itself as an influential text, subsequently going through many editions and translations in several languages. Other targets for Hanslick's heavy criticism were Anton Bruckner and Hugo Wolf. Of Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto, he accused both Tchaikovsky and the soloist, Adolph Brodsky, of putting the audience "through hell" with music "which stinks to the ear"; he was also lukewarm towards the same composer's Sixth Symphony.[9]

Hanslick is noted as one of the first widely influential music critics. While his aesthetics and his criticism are typically considered separately, they are importantly connected. Hanslick was an outspoken opponent of the music of Liszt and Wagner, which broke down traditional musical forms as a means of communicating something extra-musical. His opposition to "the music of the future" is congruent with his aesthetics of music: the meaning of music is the form of music. It is along these lines that Hanslick became one of Brahms's champions and often pitted him against Wagner.

Vom Musikalisch-Schönen edit

First published in 1854, On the Musically Beautiful is often referred to as the foundation of modern musical aesthetics. As such claims are typically overstated, it is probably best to consider it the codification of such notions of musical autonomy and organicism. These ideas proliferated in academia, in which he was the first professor of music history and aesthetics. Importantly, while this text certainly lays the theoretical groundwork for musical formalism, formal analysis is something that Hanslick himself never did.

Chapter 1: Aesthetics as Founded on Feelings

This chapter critiques the standing aesthetics of music, which Hanslick refers to as the “aesthetics of feeling.” He cites the following authors to demonstrate “how deeply these doctrines [aesthetics of emotion] have taken root”: Mattheson, Neidthardt, J.N. Forkel, J. Mosel, C.F. Michaelis, Marpurg, W. Heinse, J.J. Engel, J.Ph. Kirnberger, Pierer, G. Schilling, Koch, A. André, Sulzer, J.W. Boehm, Gottfried Weber, F. Hand, Amadeus Autodidaktus, Fermo Bellini, Friedrich Thiersch, A. v. Dommer, and Richard Wagner. By ending his list of theorists with Wagner, he makes his primary critical target obvious; Wagner had recently published his own essay, Opera and Drama, in 1851, in which he demonstrates how his compositional technique expresses the feelings inherent in the content and form of poetry.[citation needed] In contradistinction, Hanslick asserts the autonomy of music, writing, “The beautiful is and remains beautiful though it arouse no emotion whatever, and though there be no one to look at it. In other words, although the beautiful exists for the gratification of an observer, it is independent of him.”

Chapter 2: The Representation of Feelings is Not the Subject of Music

Hanslick posits that since emotion is not present in the music (objective) but is dependent on the listener's interpretation (subjective) it cannot be the basis for an aesthetics of music. He does admit, however, that music may “awaken feelings,” but maintains that it cannot “represent” them.[citation needed]

Chapter 3: The Beautiful in Music

Hanslick writes, “The essence of music is sound and motion” and suggests that the proper basis for an aesthetics of music are “sonically moving forms.” Furthermore, he suggests that these forms extend, or grow, from a freely conceived musical theme. He writes,

“The initial force of a composition is the invention of some definite theme, and not the desire to describe a given emotion by musical means. Thanks to that primitive and mysterious power, whose mode of action will forever be hidden from us, a theme, a melody flashes on the composer’s mind. The origin of this first germ cannot be explained, but must simply be accepted as a fact. When once it has taken root in the composer’s imagination, it forthwith begins to grow and develop; the principal theme being the center round which the branches group themselves in all conceivable ways, though always unmistakably related to it. The beauty of an independent and simple theme appeals to our aesthetic feeling with that directness, which tolerates no explanation, except, perhaps, that of its inherent fitness and the harmony of parts, to the exclusion of any alien factor. It pleases for its own sake, like an arabesque, a column, or some spontaneous product of nature – a leaf or a flower.”

Chapter 4: Analysis of the Subjective Impression of Music

He distinguishes between the composer, musical work as an autonomous object, and the activity of the listener. When discussing the initial compositional conception he cites women as an example for why this process cannot be emotional, but must be intellectual. He writes, “Women by nature are highly emotional beings, [but] have achieved nothing as composers.” He acknowledges that composers do possess a highly developed emotional faculty but that in music it is not the “productive factor.” Furthermore, he asserts, “It is not the actual feeling of the composer” that evokes feelings in a listener, but “the purely musical features of a composition.” Regarding the listener, he includes a lengthy discussion of the science of hearing and its limitations. He concludes, “Those theorists who ground the beautiful in music on the feelings it excites build upon a most uncertain foundation, scientifically speaking, since they are necessarily quite ignorant of the nature of this connection, and can therefore, at best, only indulge in speculations and flights of fancy. An interpretation of music based on the feelings cannot be acceptable either to art or science.”

Chapter 5: An Aesthetic Hearing as Distinguished from a Pathological Hearing of Music

He identifies two modes of listening: active (“aesthetic”) and passive (“pathological”). The active listener listens to music to discover the method of composition, while to the passive listener music is merely sound. He writes,

“The most important factor in the mental process which accompanies the act of listening to music, and which converts it into a source of pleasure, is frequently overlooked. We here refer to the intellectual satisfaction which the listener derives from continually following and anticipating the composer’s intentions – now, to see his expectations fulfilled, and now, to find himself agreeably mistaken. It is a matter of course that this intellectual flux and reflux, this perpetual giving and receiving takes place unconsciously, and with the rapidity of lightning flashes. Only that music can yield truly aesthetic enjoyment which prompts and rewards the act of thus closely following the composer’s thoughts, and which with perfect justice may be called a pondering of the imagination.”

Chapter 6: Music in its Relation to Nature

Hanslick suggests, “Melody is the ‘initial force,’ the life-blood, the primitive cell of the musical organism, with which the drift and development of the composition are closely bound up”; both melody and harmony are “achievement[s] of man.” Rhythm, however, and in particular duple meter, he believes is found in nature: “It is the only musical element which nature possesses, the first we are conscious of, and that with which the mind of the infant and the savage becomes soonest familiar.” He continues to posit that music is a product of the mind, having no precursor in nature. Even the music of a shepherd is not natural, he claims, since it was invented in the shepherd's mind, and the imitation of cuckoos in symphonies, for example, should not be considered music, since its function is not musical but poetic (i.e., to point to something outside of the music).

Chapter 7: Form and Substance (Subject) as Applied to Music

Hanslick concludes that the idea in music can only be purely musical (“Music consists of successions and forms of sound, and these alone constitute the subject”), and the value of a piece of music is determined by the relation between the idea (for example the theme) and the whole of the work. He writes,

“We cannot acquaint anybody with the ‘subject’ of a theme, except by playing it. The subject of a composition can, therefore, not be understood as an object derived from an external source, but as something intrinsically musical; in other words, as the concrete group of sounds in a piece of music. Now, as a composition must comply with the formal laws of beauty, it cannot run on arbitrarily and at random, but must develop gradually with intelligible and organic definiteness, as buds develop into rich blossoms.”[10]

Works (German editions) edit

  • Eduard Hanslick, "Vom Musikalisch-Schönen". Leipzig 1854 (online version)
  • Eduard Hanslick, "Geschichte des Konzertwesens in Wien", 2 vol. Vienna 1869–70
  • Eduard Hanslick, "Die moderne Oper", 9 vol. Berlin 1875–1900
  • Eduard Hanslick, "Aus meinem Leben", 2 vol. Berlin 1894
  • Eduard Hanslick, "Suite. Aufsätze über Musik und Musiker". Vienna 1884

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Hanslick replied to this attack that "my father and all his ancestors were of Catholic peasant stock and came, moreover, from a region where Jews were known only as peddlers."[6]

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Grey 2001.
  2. ^ Grimes 2015, "Introduction".
  3. ^ Grimes 2015, "Absolute Music".
  4. ^ Hanslick 1963, p. 11.
  5. ^ Hanslick 1963, p. 13.
  6. ^ Hanslick 1963, p. 12.
  7. ^ Newman, Ernest. The Life of Richard Wagner, volume 3. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 1976, ISBN 0-521-29096-1, p.199
  8. ^ Frisch 1990, p. 145.
  9. ^ Hanslick 1963, pp. 302–303.
  10. ^ Eduard Hanslick. The Beautiful in Music. Translated by Gustav Cohen, edited with an introduction by Morris Weitz. New York: The Liberal Arts Press, 1957.

Sources edit

Further reading edit

See Grimes 2015 for an extensive bibliography

  • Ambros Wilhelmer, "Der junge Hanslick. Sein 'Intermezzo' in Klagenfurt 1850-1852". Klagenfurt 1959
  • Ludvová, Jitka. Dokonalý antiwagnerián Eduard Hanslick. Paměti/Fejetony/Kritiky (Praha 1992).
  • Grey, Thomas (1995). Wagner's Musical Prose: Texts and Contexts. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Eduard Hanslick, "Censur und Kunst-Kritik," Wiener Zeitung, 24 March 1848, republished in his Sämtliche Schriften, vol 1, part 1, p. 157, Ed. Dietmar Strauß
  • Christian Jung: Wagner und Hanslick. Kurze Geschichte einer Feindschaft. In: Österreichische Musikzeitschrift 67 (2012), p.. 14–21.
  • Nicole Grimes et al., ed., Rethinking Hanslick: Music, Formalism, and Expression, University of Rochester Press, 2013

External links edit

  • Works by Eduard Hanslick at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Eduard Hanslick at Internet Archive
  • Geoffrey Payzant and Eduard Hanslick collection at University of Toronto Music Library
  • Eduard Hanslick, Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy

eduard, hanslick, september, 1825, august, 1904, austrian, music, critic, aesthetician, historian, among, leading, critics, time, chief, music, critic, neue, freie, presse, from, 1864, until, life, best, known, work, 1854, treatise, musikalisch, schönen, music. Eduard Hanslick 11 September 1825 6 August 1904 was an Austrian music critic aesthetician and historian 1 Among the leading critics of his time he was the chief music critic of the Neue Freie Presse from 1864 until the end of his life His best known work the 1854 treatise Vom Musikalisch Schonen On the Musically Beautiful was a landmark in the aesthetics of music and outlines much of his artistic and philosophical beliefs on music 2 Eduard HanslickPortrait of Hanslick published in 1894Born 1825 09 11 11 September 1825Prague Austrian EmpireDied6 August 1904 1904 08 06 aged 78 Baden AustriaOccupationsMusic criticaestheticianhistorianHanslick was a conservative critic and championed absolute music over programmatic music for much of his career 3 As such he sided with and promoted the faction of Robert Schumann and Johannes Brahms in the so called War of the Romantics often deriding the works of composers such as Franz Liszt and Richard Wagner Contents 1 Life and career 2 Views on music 3 Vom Musikalisch Schonen 4 Works German editions 5 References 5 1 Notes 5 2 Citations 5 3 Sources 6 Further reading 7 External linksLife and career editEduard Hanslick was born in Prague then in the Austrian Empire the son of Joseph Adolph Hanslik a bibliographer and music teacher from a German speaking family and one of Hanslik s piano pupils the daughter of a Jewish merchant from Vienna At the age of eighteen Hanslick went to study music with Vaclav Tomasek one of Prague s renowned musicians He also studied law at Prague University and obtained a degree in that field but his amateur study of music eventually led to writing music reviews for small town newspapers then the Wiener Musik Zeitung and eventually the Neue Freie Presse where he was music critic until retirement Whilst still a student in 1845 he met with Richard Wagner in Marienbad the composer noting the young man s enthusiasm invited him to Dresden to hear his opera Tannhauser here Hanslick also met with Robert Schumann 4 nbsp Grave of Dr Eduard Hanslick Zentralfriedhof ViennaIn 1854 he published his influential book On the Beautiful in Music By this time his interest in Wagner had begun to cool he had written a disparaging review of the first Vienna production of Lohengrin From this point on Hanslick found his sympathies moving away from the so called music of the Future associated with Wagner and Franz Liszt and more towards music he conceived as directly descending from the traditions of Mozart Beethoven and Schumann 5 in particular the music of Johannes Brahms who dedicated to him his set of waltzes opus 39 for piano duet In 1869 in a revised edition of his essay Jewishness in Music Wagner attacked Hanslick as of gracefully concealed Jewish origin and asserted that his supposedly Jewish style of criticism was anti German n 1 It is sometimes claimed that Wagner caricatured Hanslick in his opera Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg as the carping critic Beckmesser whose name was originally to be Veit Hanslich 7 Hanslick s unpaid lectureship at the University of Vienna led in 1870 to a full professorship in history and aesthetic of music and later to a doctorate honoris causa 1 Hanslick often served on juries for musical competitions and held a post at the Austrian Ministry of Culture and fulfilled other administrative roles He retired after writing his memoirs but still wrote articles on the most important premieres of the day up to his death in 1904 in Baden citation needed Views on music edit nbsp Eduard Hanslick offering incense to Brahms cartoon from the Viennese satirical magazine Figaro 1890Hanslick s tastes were conservative in his memoirs he said that for him musical history really began with Mozart and culminated in Beethoven Schumann and Brahms He is best remembered today for his critical advocacy of Brahms as against the school of Wagner an episode in 19th century music history sometimes called the War of the Romantics The critic Richard Pohl of the Neue Zeitschrift fur Musik represented the progressive composers of the Music of the Future Being a close friend of Brahms from 1862 Hanslick possibly had some influence on Brahms s composing often getting to hear new music before it was published 8 Hanslick saw Wagner s reliance on dramatics and word painting as inimical to the nature of music which he thought to be expressive solely by virtue of its form and not through any extra musical associations On the other hand he referred to extra musicality when he asked When you play Chopin s mazurkas do you not feel the mournful and oppressive air of the Battle of Ostroleka Hanslick 1848 p 157 The theoretical framework of Hanslick s criticism is expounded in his book of 1854 Vom Musikalisch Schonen On the Beautiful in Music which started as an attack on the Wagnerian aesthetic and established itself as an influential text subsequently going through many editions and translations in several languages Other targets for Hanslick s heavy criticism were Anton Bruckner and Hugo Wolf Of Tchaikovsky s Violin Concerto he accused both Tchaikovsky and the soloist Adolph Brodsky of putting the audience through hell with music which stinks to the ear he was also lukewarm towards the same composer s Sixth Symphony 9 Hanslick is noted as one of the first widely influential music critics While his aesthetics and his criticism are typically considered separately they are importantly connected Hanslick was an outspoken opponent of the music of Liszt and Wagner which broke down traditional musical forms as a means of communicating something extra musical His opposition to the music of the future is congruent with his aesthetics of music the meaning of music is the form of music It is along these lines that Hanslick became one of Brahms s champions and often pitted him against Wagner Vom Musikalisch Schonen editFirst published in 1854 On the Musically Beautiful is often referred to as the foundation of modern musical aesthetics As such claims are typically overstated it is probably best to consider it the codification of such notions of musical autonomy and organicism These ideas proliferated in academia in which he was the first professor of music history and aesthetics Importantly while this text certainly lays the theoretical groundwork for musical formalism formal analysis is something that Hanslick himself never did Chapter 1 Aesthetics as Founded on FeelingsThis chapter critiques the standing aesthetics of music which Hanslick refers to as the aesthetics of feeling He cites the following authors to demonstrate how deeply these doctrines aesthetics of emotion have taken root Mattheson Neidthardt J N Forkel J Mosel C F Michaelis Marpurg W Heinse J J Engel J Ph Kirnberger Pierer G Schilling Koch A Andre Sulzer J W Boehm Gottfried Weber F Hand Amadeus Autodidaktus Fermo Bellini Friedrich Thiersch A v Dommer and Richard Wagner By ending his list of theorists with Wagner he makes his primary critical target obvious Wagner had recently published his own essay Opera and Drama in 1851 in which he demonstrates how his compositional technique expresses the feelings inherent in the content and form of poetry citation needed In contradistinction Hanslick asserts the autonomy of music writing The beautiful is and remains beautiful though it arouse no emotion whatever and though there be no one to look at it In other words although the beautiful exists for the gratification of an observer it is independent of him Chapter 2 The Representation of Feelings is Not the Subject of MusicHanslick posits that since emotion is not present in the music objective but is dependent on the listener s interpretation subjective it cannot be the basis for an aesthetics of music He does admit however that music may awaken feelings but maintains that it cannot represent them citation needed Chapter 3 The Beautiful in MusicHanslick writes The essence of music is sound and motion and suggests that the proper basis for an aesthetics of music are sonically moving forms Furthermore he suggests that these forms extend or grow from a freely conceived musical theme He writes The initial force of a composition is the invention of some definite theme and not the desire to describe a given emotion by musical means Thanks to that primitive and mysterious power whose mode of action will forever be hidden from us a theme a melody flashes on the composer s mind The origin of this first germ cannot be explained but must simply be accepted as a fact When once it has taken root in the composer s imagination it forthwith begins to grow and develop the principal theme being the center round which the branches group themselves in all conceivable ways though always unmistakably related to it The beauty of an independent and simple theme appeals to our aesthetic feeling with that directness which tolerates no explanation except perhaps that of its inherent fitness and the harmony of parts to the exclusion of any alien factor It pleases for its own sake like an arabesque a column or some spontaneous product of nature a leaf or a flower Chapter 4 Analysis of the Subjective Impression of MusicHe distinguishes between the composer musical work as an autonomous object and the activity of the listener When discussing the initial compositional conception he cites women as an example for why this process cannot be emotional but must be intellectual He writes Women by nature are highly emotional beings but have achieved nothing as composers He acknowledges that composers do possess a highly developed emotional faculty but that in music it is not the productive factor Furthermore he asserts It is not the actual feeling of the composer that evokes feelings in a listener but the purely musical features of a composition Regarding the listener he includes a lengthy discussion of the science of hearing and its limitations He concludes Those theorists who ground the beautiful in music on the feelings it excites build upon a most uncertain foundation scientifically speaking since they are necessarily quite ignorant of the nature of this connection and can therefore at best only indulge in speculations and flights of fancy An interpretation of music based on the feelings cannot be acceptable either to art or science Chapter 5 An Aesthetic Hearing as Distinguished from a Pathological Hearing of MusicHe identifies two modes of listening active aesthetic and passive pathological The active listener listens to music to discover the method of composition while to the passive listener music is merely sound He writes The most important factor in the mental process which accompanies the act of listening to music and which converts it into a source of pleasure is frequently overlooked We here refer to the intellectual satisfaction which the listener derives from continually following and anticipating the composer s intentions now to see his expectations fulfilled and now to find himself agreeably mistaken It is a matter of course that this intellectual flux and reflux this perpetual giving and receiving takes place unconsciously and with the rapidity of lightning flashes Only that music can yield truly aesthetic enjoyment which prompts and rewards the act of thus closely following the composer s thoughts and which with perfect justice may be called a pondering of the imagination Chapter 6 Music in its Relation to NatureHanslick suggests Melody is the initial force the life blood the primitive cell of the musical organism with which the drift and development of the composition are closely bound up both melody and harmony are achievement s of man Rhythm however and in particular duple meter he believes is found in nature It is the only musical element which nature possesses the first we are conscious of and that with which the mind of the infant and the savage becomes soonest familiar He continues to posit that music is a product of the mind having no precursor in nature Even the music of a shepherd is not natural he claims since it was invented in the shepherd s mind and the imitation of cuckoos in symphonies for example should not be considered music since its function is not musical but poetic i e to point to something outside of the music Chapter 7 Form and Substance Subject as Applied to MusicHanslick concludes that the idea in music can only be purely musical Music consists of successions and forms of sound and these alone constitute the subject and the value of a piece of music is determined by the relation between the idea for example the theme and the whole of the work He writes We cannot acquaint anybody with the subject of a theme except by playing it The subject of a composition can therefore not be understood as an object derived from an external source but as something intrinsically musical in other words as the concrete group of sounds in a piece of music Now as a composition must comply with the formal laws of beauty it cannot run on arbitrarily and at random but must develop gradually with intelligible and organic definiteness as buds develop into rich blossoms 10 Works German editions editEduard Hanslick Vom Musikalisch Schonen Leipzig 1854 online version Eduard Hanslick Geschichte des Konzertwesens in Wien 2 vol Vienna 1869 70 Eduard Hanslick Die moderne Oper 9 vol Berlin 1875 1900 Eduard Hanslick Aus meinem Leben 2 vol Berlin 1894 Eduard Hanslick Suite Aufsatze uber Musik und Musiker Vienna 1884References editNotes edit Hanslick replied to this attack that my father and all his ancestors were of Catholic peasant stock and came moreover from a region where Jews were known only as peddlers 6 Citations edit a b Grey 2001 Grimes 2015 Introduction Grimes 2015 Absolute Music Hanslick 1963 p 11 Hanslick 1963 p 13 Hanslick 1963 p 12 Newman Ernest The Life of Richard Wagner volume 3 Cambridge University Press Cambridge 1976 ISBN 0 521 29096 1 p 199 Frisch 1990 p 145 Hanslick 1963 pp 302 303 Eduard Hanslick The Beautiful in Music Translated by Gustav Cohen edited with an introduction by Morris Weitz New York The Liberal Arts Press 1957 Sources edit Frisch Walter 1990 Brahms and His World Princeton Princeton University Press Grey Thomas S 2001 Hanslick Eduard Grove Music Online Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 gmo 9781561592630 article 12341 ISBN 978 1 56159 263 0 subscription or UK public library membership required Grimes Nicole 2015 Eduard Hanslick Oxford Bibliographies Music Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 OBO 9780199757824 0014 subscription required Hanslick Eduard 1963 Pleasants Henry ed Music Criticism 1846 99 Introduction by Henry Pleasants London Penguin Books Further reading editSee Grimes 2015 for an extensive bibliography Ambros Wilhelmer Der junge Hanslick Sein Intermezzo in Klagenfurt 1850 1852 Klagenfurt 1959 Ludvova Jitka Dokonaly antiwagnerian Eduard Hanslick Pameti Fejetony Kritiky Praha 1992 Grey Thomas 1995 Wagner s Musical Prose Texts and Contexts Cambridge Cambridge University Press Eduard Hanslick Censur und Kunst Kritik Wiener Zeitung 24 March 1848 republished in his Samtliche Schriften vol 1 part 1 p 157 Ed Dietmar Strauss Christian Jung Wagner und Hanslick Kurze Geschichte einer Feindschaft In Osterreichische Musikzeitschrift 67 2012 p 14 21 Nicole Grimes et al ed Rethinking Hanslick Music Formalism and Expression University of Rochester Press 2013External links editWorks by Eduard Hanslick at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Eduard Hanslick at Internet Archive Geoffrey Payzant and Eduard Hanslick collection at University of Toronto Music Library Eduard Hanslick Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Portals nbsp Austria nbsp Biography nbsp Classical music nbsp Music nbsp OperaEduard Hanslick at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eduard Hanslick amp oldid 1193131531, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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