Sounds Unlikely
Margaret Handford
- Price: £19.95
- Publisher: Brewin Books
- ISBN: 9781858582870
- Availability: In Stock
Birmingham’s present musical eminence is
principally associated with Simon Rattle’s brilliant seasons with the City of
Birmingham Symphony Orchestra from 1980 to 1998. This exciting and very
prestigious development was in fact a transformation, based on a solid musical
foundation built up through the endeavour of many interesting and active
musicians and music-lovers over a period of several centuries. It did not, like
Athene, spring fully armed from the head of Zeus so to speak.
Moving through the ages, from the chantries
of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, to the busy eighteenth century
organists whose enterprise led to the great nineteenth century Musical
Festivals and culminating in the age of the orchestra in the twentieth, the
book describes how the foundation was laid.
The reader will enjoy thumbnail sketches of
the personalities involved, as well as appreciating them in their own settings
and in the wider perspective.
The consequence of all their efforts and achievements is that Birmingham’s reputation as an industrial centre has now been equalled by its present reputation as a cultural one. This is an account of how, with no single architect but many men of vision, the present-day much admired edifice has been established.
Book Review
"Margaret Handford's Sounds Unlikely is a joy to handle and is a fascinating bran-tub of information about the history of music in Birmingham...this attractive book, well-indexed and well-illustrated is both a valuable research tool and an excellent read."
Christopher Morley, The Birmingham Post, 14/12/06
Details | |
Format | Hardback |
Pages | 368 |
Dimensions | 240mm x 170mm |
Illustrations | black & white |