"1979. Paris éditions Borderie revue Obliques numéro spécial dirigé par Yvonne Caroutch 1979 - Broché 21 cm x 27 cm 320 pages photos noir & blanc in et hors-texte 4 planches hors-texte en couleur - Textes de Yvonne Caroutch Pierre Boulez Richard Wagner Franz Liszt Louis II de Bavière Julien Gracq Gérard de Nerval Stéphane Mallarmé Friedrich Nietzsche etc. - Etat neuf"
Reference : 4968
Librairie Sedon
M. Didier Sedon
62 rue Cochon Duvivier
17300 Rochefort
France
06 19 22 96 97
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Cercle Romand Richard Wagner, 2013, 266 pp., broché, légères traces d'usage, bon état général.
Phone number : 0033 (0)1 42 23 30 39
G.-J. Salvy, Revue "L'énergumène" n° 2, 1974, 102 pp., broché, très bon état.
Phone number : 0033 (0)1 42 23 30 39
L'Unebévue, Cahiers de l'Unebévue, 2011, 236 pp., broché, bon état.
Phone number : 0033 (0)1 42 23 30 39
MUSICA. Octobre 1903. In-Folio. En feuillets. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. Paginé de 195 à 208 pages de partitions. Nombreuses photographies en noir et blanc dans le format texte et hors texte. Photographie du Monument de Richard Wagner en noir et blanc sur le premier plat.. . . . Classification Dewey : 780.26-Partitions
Le 1er de chaque mois / Le moment de Richard Wagner + Le haut Comité d'Organisation + La vie de Richard Wagner + Portraits de Richard Wagner + Photographies de Madame Milka Ternina et de Van Dyck + Richard Wagner & l'interprétation + Wagner à Paris en 1849 + Richard Wagner à Bayreuth, par G. Papperitz + Les grands Chefs d'orchestre Wagnériens + Richard Wagner et la peinture + Richard Wagner & la caricature. Classification Dewey : 780.26-Partitions
Leipzig, Verlag von C.G. Naumann, (1888.) Two works in one volume. (8), 144 pp.; (8), 57, (1) pp. 8vo. Contemporary half cloth, spine lettered gilt, marbled boards, corners. First work: Schaberg 56. First edition of the "Twilight of the Gods" and written during an incredibly productive six month period before Nietzsche's collapse in Turin. It was also the last book published during his lifetime. The title refers to an image in the preface: idols "are touched with a hammer and a tuning fork to determine whether they are hollow", which is of course a sarcastic allusion to Wagner, both personally and as a symbol of the German spirit. Nietzsche had 1,000 copies of this work privately printed. Originally to be called "A Psychologist at Leisure," Nietzsche changed the title at the suggestion of his friend, Gast and the book was released a few weeks after Nietzsche collapsed in Turin. The "Idols" that Nietzsche singles out here are those of the philosophers and the moralists. The Preface clearly states that the work at hand is to be "the revaluation of all values". Socrates and Christianity are particular targets although modern Germany and other contemporary ideas are also taken to task in the normally acerbic style of the author. (This book also contains some of Nietzsche's most frequently quoted phrases beginning with Aphorism #8: "What does not kill me only makes me stronger".)Second work: Schaberg 54.First edition, second issue. The book was published on 22 September 1888. Five hundred copies were printed, but 500 additional copies were printed at this time and falsely marked as second edition by the addition of "Zweite Auflage" in the middle of the ornamental rule and the deletion of the publication date. The true second edition of a 1000 copies was printed in October of 1891.The book is a critique of Richard Wagner and the announcement of Nietzsche's rupture with the German artist, who had involved himself too much, in Nietzsche's eyes, in the Völkisch movement and antisemitism. His music is no longer represented as a possible "philosophical affect," and Wagner is ironically compared to Georges Bizet. However, Wagner is presented by Nietzsche as only a particular symptom of a broader "disease" which is affecting Europe, that is nihilism. The book shows Nietzsche as a capable music-critic, and provides the setting for some of his further reflections on the nature of art and on its relationship to the future health of humanity.This work is in sharp contrast with the second part of Nietzsche's The Birth of Tragedy, wherein he praised Wagner as fulfilling a need in music to go beyond the analytic and dispassionate understanding of music. Nietzsche also praised Wagner effusively in his essay 'Wagner at Bayreuth' (part of the Untimely Meditations), but his disillusion with Wagner the composer and the man was first seen in his 1878 work Human, All Too Human. One of the last works that Nietzsche wrote returned to the critical theme of The Case of Wagner. In Nietzsche contra Wagner, Nietzsche pulled together excerpts from his works to show that he consistently had the same thoughts about music, only that he had misapplied them to Wagner in the earliest works. - First and last leaves a bit foxed, some scattered annotations in blue pencil and lead pencil.Provenance: from the library of A. Diepenbrock, with his signature on the first free endpaper (and date Jan. 1889) and second title-page (with the date Sept. 1888.) Alphons Diepenbrock was a Dutch composer, essayist and classicist. Although he showed musical ability he studied classics at the University of Amsterdam, gaining his doctorate cum laude in 1888 with a dissertation in Latin on the life of Seneca. The same year he became a teacher, a job which he held until 1894, when he retired from that position and decided to devote himself to music. As a composer, he had been completely self-taught from an early age. He created a musical idiom which, in a highly personal manner, combined 16th-century polyphony with Wagnerian chromaticism, to which in later years was added the impressionistic refinement that he encountered in Debussy's music. His predominantly vocal output is distinguished by the high quality of the texts used. Apart from the Ancient Greek dramatists and Latin liturgy, he was inspired by, among others, Goethe, Novalis, Vondel, Brentano, Hölderlin, Heine, Nietzsche, Baudelaire and Verlaine. As a conductor, he performed many contemporary works, including Gustav Mahler's Fourth Symphony (at the Concertgebouw) as well as works by Fauré and Debussy. Throughout his life, Diepenbrock continued his interests in the wider cultural sphere, remaining a classics tutor and publishing works on literature, painting, politics, philosophy and religion. Indeed during his lifetime his musical skills were often overlooked. Nonetheless, Diepenbrock was very much a respected figure within musical circles. He counted amongst his friends Mahler, Richard Strauss and Arnold Schoenberg.
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