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The Wagner Operas
The Wagner Operas | Ernest Newman
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In this classic guide, the foremost Wagner expert of our century discusses ten of Wagner's most beloved operas, illuminates their key themes and the myths and literary sources behind the librettos, and demonstrates how the composer's style changed from work to work. Acclaimed as the most complete and intellectually satisfying analysis of the Wagner operas, the book has met with unreserved enthusiasm from specialist and casual music lover alike. Here, available for the first time in a single paperback volume, is the perfect companion for listening to, or attending, The Flying Dutchman, Tannhuser, Lohengrin, Tristan and Isolde, Die Meistersinger, the four operas of the Ring Cycle, and Parsifal. Newman enriches his treatment of the stories, texts, and music of the operas with biographical and historical materials from the store of knowledge that he acquired while completing his numerous books on Wagner, including the magisterial Life of Richard Wagner. The text of The Wagner Operas is filled with hundreds of musical examples from the scores, and all the important leitmotifs and their interrelationships are made clear in Newman's lucid prose. "This is as fine an introduction as any ever written about a major composer's masterpieces. Newman outlines with unfailing clarity and astuteness each opera's dramatic sources, and he takes the student through the completed opera, step by step, with all manner of incidental insight along the way."--Robert Bailey, New York University
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tokorowilliamwallace
The Wagner Operas | Ernest Newman
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St. Nikolaus Day dinner at Hollenbach's outfit for nephew's birthday celebration---with my tartan Lutherian-Morean tam hat! Books stacked: Sagas of the Icelanders (700-pager), Ernest Newman's 3-vol omnibus of Great Stories of the Operas, JCO's Bloodsmoor Romance (700-pager) a la The Accursed CR, the classic Snow Queen fantasy, Harold Robbins, Brit dragon roller coaster mystery, The Soong Dynasty (another mulitgenerational option), 1200pg war novel

slategreyskies The 1200 page novel would be a good choice for #ChunksterChallenge2022. I can‘t remember how many pages a chunkster chosen for the challenge is supposed to be, but I know 1200 is over that amount. :) 3y
slategreyskies @Amiable came up with #ChunksterChallenge, so you can tag her and follow her if you‘re interested in more details. :) 3y
Amiable @slategreyskies Thanks! My own personal annual chunkster challenge is something that‘s approximately 1,000 pages or more. For me, a “chunkster” is at least 800+pages. But my goal for the challenge is to encourage people to tackle whatever “giant” book intimidates them personally. So that could mean something different to each reader. I really just want people to find the courage to dive into the big books because it‘s so rewarding to finish! 3y
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Amiable And this one definitely qualifies as a chunkster by any definition! 😀 3y
slategreyskies @Amiable okay, thanks! I‘m definitely going to choose a chunkster for 2022. Not sure which one yet! :) 3y
tokorowilliamwallace @slategreyskies, don't forget my order of The first Terry Goodkind Sword of Truth Trilogy (almost 3.000 pages) and Outlander vols. 1 & 6 (800 and 1400, respectively) order from October, the four other epic fantasies I've started and need to finish (all over 500), the 1200 Hindi epic of A Suitable Boy, James Clavell's Whirlwind (Iran revolution of 1979, 1400), the 1400 Sacajawea, 2 sci-fi being worked on (500+), Anna Karenin to finish, &c.! & more 3y
tokorowilliamwallace @Amiable, the south Baltimore book club had some members create a nested internal group for this very thing for the more hardcore blook club members---chonkers or the most commonly considered intimidating books to read/finish. James Joyce's Ulysses got the most votes out of the choices of a David Foster Wallace, a Thomas Pynchon, maybe Proust, and some other choice I can't remember. They held an anniversary meeting for it this year (Bloom Day) 3y
Amiable @tokorowilliamwallace Spread the chunkster love! That's awesome. (Are you in Baltimore? My youngest son lives there -- he's right at the edge of Federal Hill and Otterbein.) For what it's worth, I adored “A Suitable Boy,“ if you are eying that one. :) 3y
tokorowilliamwallace @Amiable, I lived just across the city-county line for two years working with dementia with a friend and his family, but the situation got to be too much for me. I loved Maryland and being so close to Baltimore, and experiencing seasons; one day I hope to move back. I was involved in a religious group out of Federal Hill, and I found some quality philosophy at the bookstore right there around Otterbein!

https://www.facebook.com/groups/17059775596
3y
Amiable @tokorowilliamwallace Neat! I think he knows that bookstore. He's not very religious, but he does love to read. ;) 3y
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