Words and Music

“Words and Music” by Judith Beniston, published by MHRA in 2010, offers a collection of essays that span over two hundred years, from the Classical Enlightenment to the early twenty-first century. This edition, comprising 227 pages, delves into the intricate relationships between literary texts and musical compositions, examining how these forms influence and transform each other within their historical contexts.
Readers will find a range of studies that analyze specific composers’ interpretations of poets, as well as the adaptations of literary works into operatic forms. The essays provide insights into the connections between individual works and the broader literary and musical traditions, often highlighting key historical moments that shape their development. Additionally, the volume explores the reciprocal influence of music on writers, emphasizing their roles as both audiences and creators. This scholarly work contributes to the fields of literary criticism and music history, particularly within the European context.
Official synopsis Publisher
The chronological range covered by the individual essays is more than two hundred years, from the Classical Enlightenment to the early twenty-first century. Some of the studies encompassed by this volume undertake the analysis of one composer’s settings of a particular poet’s work – albeit with rather more critical rigour. Others trace the ways in which a literary text is modified and adapted before and as it develops as one of the principal components of an opera. Several share new insights into the complex relationships of individual works with the literary and musical traditions out of which they emerge (or which they transform and renew) – or set such works in the political contexts of their genesis or reception, often using a key historical moment, a turning-point or a ‘snapshot’, as the starting-point for a wide-ranging investigation. In some cases the words and the music are those of the same ‘composer’, the relationship here shedding light on the process of composition itself. Literary works are often scrutinized for the light they shed on a musician’s creative processes, but the importance of music to writers – as audiences, but also as amateur or even semi-professional practitioners – is no less important as an investigative standpoint.
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