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Alex Ross:The Rest is Noise: Listening to the
Twentieth Century. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, © 2007,
ISBN 978-0-374-24939-7, Pp. xiv + 624, $30.00. See also www.therestisnoise.com
Ross, The New Yorker’s classical music writer,
has accomplished a seemingly unachievable synthesis in the fifteen chapters
of this encyclopedic
yet eminently readable examination of the last century’s classical
music output. The text is divided into three parts, which are in turn
divided into chapters of varying numbers and lengths: six for Pt. I,
three for Pt. II,
and six for Pt. III, though the final one also takes the reader into
the present century. These are surrounded by a four-page Preface and
an three-page
Epilogue, and completed with 49 two-column fine-print pages of reference
notes and a 24-page fine-print index, these latter separated by a page
of Suggested Listening (top ten CDs + twenty more) and four pages of
Acknowledgements. The breadth and depth of the preparatory research and
the clearly attentive
accompanying listening are astounding; their scholarly weight is surely
far heavier than what he has so skillfully distilled into the book. It
has obviously been a long but passionate journey for Ross, “a labor
of love,” as they say.
The narrative is organized around pivotal moments, such as the 1913 Paris
première of Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring, important
figures such as Schoenberg, Strauss, Debussy, Messiaen, Bartók,
Janácek,
Gershwin, Copland, Prokofiev, Shostakovich, etc., seminal writings, such
as Schoenberg’s Harmonielehre and Thomas Mann’s Doctor
Faustus,
and defining compositions such as Shostakovich’s Leningrad Symphony
(No. 7) and Bernstein’s West Side Story, which form the
centers or apotheoses of the chapters around which other tales are told
and facts
are fitted. Twentieth century musical creation begins with Strauss’ Salome and
ends with Adams’ Nixon
in China. Only two composers merit chapters
all their own: Sibelius and Britten; perhaps not the two you would have
expected?
Ross provides capsule biographies of composers, succinct synopses of
styles, and nutshell analyses of compositions, always pointing out the
interconnections among the people and interrelationships among the works.
These latter, such as between Wozzeck and Porgy and Bess (p.148), are
often unexpected, sometimes surprising to the amateur music lover as
opposed to the musicologist. He also relates both to their cultural context:
philosophies, other arts, other musics (minimalism with the Velvet Underground
[p.509], for example), and to historical events which they influenced
or which influenced them. His concise descriptions are spot on, often
among the best this writer has read (his treatments of Debussy [pp.39-45]
and Messiaen [pp.446-456 and elsewhere] spring to mind), and his assessments
are accurate and authoritative.
The book is a kaleidoscopic compendium of information presented in an
enjoyable manner, readily accessible to the layman; esoteric concepts
and practices are carefully explained without being over-simplified or
dumbed down. Works with this much content are often tedious and slow-going
for the overwhelmed reader. Ross’ engaging style generally avoids
this problem and offers numerous “quotable quotes.” He writes
(p.541) of “the interconnectedness of the musical experience”;
this is really the thesis and guiding principle of the entire book itself.
There are, however, a few curiosities of omission and organization. While
Ross devotes more than a few pages to some 19th-century composers who
lived on into the 20th, such as Mahler (d.1911) and Debussy (d.1918),
he neglects others such as Saint-Saëns (d.1921) and Fauré (d.1924,
who lived even longer, almost a quarter of the way into it, but
receive mere mentions in passing of individual works . In praising (p.533)
the BBC for its constant inclusion of 20th century music in its repertory,
he writes: “...any British orchestra would offend
its audience if it neglected the symphonies of Elgar and Vaughan Williams...”;
yet he has done so himself in his coverage of their parts of the century.
Walton, who lived entirely in the 20th century, is, like Saint-Saëns
and Fauré, granted only a mention in passing. These absences from
the stage are startling, his statement (p.xiv) that he is not attempting
to be comprehensive notwithstanding. Perhaps Ross is pandering to his
American readers and indulging American audiences’ long-standing
love affair with the Germanic and Russian traditions, relegating to the
sidelines if not nearly totally excluding the French and British ones,
their preference for large-scale orchestral and operatic works over smaller
scale chamber pieces, and their almost universal aversion to the art
song? Perhaps he is himself unwittingly a partisan of these unfortunate
inclinations? While the alternatives are not totally ignored, the focus
is overwhelmingly on the former, and either way, an opportunity to educate
readers on the pleasures and values of those alternatives has been missed.
Although Part II ostensibly covers the years 1933-1945, its first chapter
dealing with Soviet music extends to the deaths of Stalin and Prokofiev
(on the same day, it will be recalled) eight years later in 1953, while
the first chapter of Part III (1945-2000), “Zero Hour,” deals
with “The
U.S. Army and German Music, 1945-1949,” the latter year being that
of Richard Strauss’ death. Part III’s second chapter deals
with the '50s and the Cold War; Copland was summoned to appear before
McCarthy’s
Committee on Un-American Activities in 1953. One wonders why the former
chapter was not placed in Part II, and the dates of both Parts modified
accordingly: WWII did not start in 1933; neither did its consequences
for classical music end abruptly, in Europe or America, upon its 1945
conclusion. Such decisions are arbitrary, of course, but this one seems
to betray the otherwise logical chronology divisions.
While I can’t pronounce this book to be absolutely perfect, I can
wholeheartedly declare it difficult to beat; at more than 1.5 times Ross’ age,
I’d have been very hard put to do anywhere near as well! I can
enthusiastically recommend it to all classical music lovers, especially
to those who resist distinctly modern 20th century music. They owe it
to themselves to read it cover to cover; even if they still don’t
like this music, at least they’ll understand it. Reading the book
is an intellectual and a literary treat.
©
2008 Marvin J. Ward
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