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371 pages, Hardcover
First published December 12, 1947
In the plastic arts he, the creator of the "art-work of the future," was only too much a "contemporary": his naturalistic stage-setting is the despair of every artist: a sort of diorama with little moving figures of men and animals, and finally even moving stage décor. His Venusberg and flower-maiden scenes are the direct counterpart to the fulsome paintings of Hans Makart, one of the "most decorative" exponents of the art of painting in Germany's Gilded Age.On the whole he admires Tristan the most as a transcendent musical achievement, and seems somewhat uncomfortable with Parsifal, though he recognizes its achievement as a continuation and development of Wagner's unique style. Though he mentions Wagner's antisemitism, he does not lay the excesses of Nazism at the composer's feet, an anachronism some subsequent commentators were eager to commit. This is not to say that Einstein completely ignore the then very recent past; in his Foreword he says:
If in this book the presentation of the Romantic movement in Germany occupies a wide space, it might be remembered that it is, at least in the eyes of a later generation, perhaps not a matter of pride for any nation to have been the one most strongly affected by the Romantic virus.The chapters on musical genres concentrate exclusively on Germany, Italy, and France, with the exceptions of Chopin and, at the end, W. S. Gilbert (as the successor of Offenbach). In a tacked-on chapter on "Nationalism", Einstein does a quick survey of the rest of Europe, Russia, and North America. After worthwhile thumbnail sketches of Smetana, Dvorak, Tchaicovsky, and "the mighty handful", it devolves into little more than a catalog of names and compositions, as in this sentence which represents in its entirety the book's information on Franz Berwald:
The initiator of Swedish Romantic instrumental music, was Franz Berwald (1796-1868), with a G-minor symphony (Symphonie Sérieuse, 1843), another one in C major (Symphonie Singulière) and works of chamber music.While, as mentioned, I did enjoy my initial reading, the book is so disorganized that, unlike Einstein's Mozart: His Character, His Work, I cannot see myself returning to it for either reference or pleasure.