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Jean Sibelius's Violin Concerto

OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS - 19

Jean Sibelius's Violin Concerto

Sale price$17.95
SKU: 9780190611545
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Jean Sibelius's Violin Concerto

Juilliard Store

Pickup available, usually ready in 4 hours

144 West 66th Street
New York NY 10023
United States

+12127995000

Tina K. Ramnarine

Oxford Keynotes

  • Offers new perspectives on one of the most popular 20th century works through in-depth examinations of its creative, political, and ecological histories
  • Adopts a transnational perspective on the transmission of Sibelius's violin concerto
  • Analyzes 20th-century violin virtuosity in terms of labor, recording technology, and women's careers

Jean Sibelius's Violin Concerto is the story of Sibelius as performer and composer, of violin performing traditions, of histories of musical transmission, and of virtuosity itself. It investigates the history and legacy of one of the most recorded concertos in the violin repertoire. Sibelius, a celebrated and influential composer of the late 19th and 20th centuries, was an accomplished violinist, whose enduring interest in the instrument has been paralleled by the broad success of the only concerto in his oeuvre: his violin concerto (premiered in 1904 and revised in 1905).

Considering how violinists engage with the work, author Tina K. Ramnarine discusses technology's central role in the concerto's transmission from Jascha Heifetz's seminal 1935 recording to contemporary online performances, gender issues in violin solo careers, and nature-based musical aesthetics that lead to thinking about the ecology of virtuosity in an era of environmental crisis. Beginning with Sibelius's early training as a violinist and his aspirations as a performer, Ramnarine traces the dramatic historical context of the violin concerto. It was composed as Finland underwent a period of heightened self-determination, nationalism, and protest against Russian imperial policies, and it heralded intense political dynamics relating to Europe's East-West border that have extended to the present. This story of the violin concerto points to the notion of Sibelius - and the virtuoso more generally - as a political figure.