Brahms


Late Idyll: The Second Symphony of Johannes Brahms
Johannes Brahms: A Biography
Johannes Brahms (Critical Lives)
Brahms: A German Requiem (Cambridge Music Handbooks)
Where Prayer Becomes Real: How Honesty with God Transforms Your Soul
The Discernment of Spirits: An Ignatian Guide for Everyday Living
A Brahms Reader
Brahms (Master Musicians Series) by MacDonald Malcolm (2002-03-07) Paperback
Trio: A Novel About the Schumanns and Brahms
Brahms: His Life and Work
Brahms and Bruckner as Artistic Antipodes: Studies in Musical Semantics
Brahms's Elegies: The Poetics of Loss in Nineteenth-Century German Culture (Music in Context)
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Letters Of Clara Schum...
 
by
Clara Schumann
Parallels and Paradoxes: Explorations in Music and Society
Performer's Guide to Music of the Romantic Period
Jan Swafford
What elevates one and not another to the level of genius is not only talent and ambition and luck, but a gift for turning everything to the purpose. ... Perhaps that is a common element in the story of genius: beyond talent and ambition and luck, in some degree you have to be forcibly booted out of everyday life and everyday goals. In any case, it was like that with Brahms. The fulfillment of love was denied him so that other things might take wing.
Jan Swafford, Johannes Brahms: A Biography

Henry Miller
The second number goes off like a top - so fast indeed that when suddenly the music ceases and the lights go up some are stuck in their seats like carrots, their jaws working convulsively, and if you suddenly shouted in their ear Brahms, Beethoven, Mendeleev, Herzegovina, they would answer without thinking - 4, 967, 289.
Henry Miller, Tropic of Cancer

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