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How to become a musical critic (1960)

by Bernard Shaw

Other authors: Dan H. Laurence (Editor)

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2011,104,592 (3.75)1
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Full of music related trivia, this is a book with a mildly misleading title. There is a lead-in essay with that title, but the book is short of a plan to achieve that exalted position. GBS essentially got the job by an acquaintance pushing him for it, and using the complimentary tickets to enjoy himself. The late nineteenth century was very short of chances to access the classical music of the time, to a degree hard to understand by twenty-first century denizens who have a harder task to achieve silence. But, the author was happy to have a weekly opportunity to express himself to a tolerant public. eager to have the Shavian level of verbal fireworks available, no matter the topic. To the musical historian there is some value in the reading. ( )
  DinadansFriend | Feb 15, 2021 |
Shaw's six-page essay, which gives its title to the volume assiduously collected and edited by Dan H. Laurence, begins to specify what true criticism is, and the list of requirements shows why the real thing is as rare as rubies. The critic must have a cultivated taste in the art he criticizes, he must know how to write, and he must know how to criticize—three distinct powers, not guaranteed by any law of genetics to occur in one individual... Shaw adds that this paragon should also have an independent income, the wages offered to even the leading critics will not attract an able man who knows he must subject himself and his talents to a punishing round of recitals, concerts, or other exhibitions...

Shaw's greatness as an intellect and a moral being is that he shines and indulges high spirits—the highest, perhaps, in all literature—without ever being heedless. In every critical piece, long or short, his control is absolute. He is gay, not irresponsible; he hits hard but is never cruel; his energy animates the scene and the reader, it does not destroy the occa-, sion or the performer. No one can rise from reading a page of his criticism without feeling elated at the existence of art itself, at the thought that in the muddle and misery of civilization such an activity as a concert can take place, and such thoughts and feelings be generated by it in an organized mind and body.
added by SnootyBaronet | editThe Mid-Century, Jacques Barzun (Jan 1, 1961)
 

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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Bernard Shawprimary authorall editionscalculated
Dan H. LaurenceEditorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
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At 9 o'clock (the Opera began at 8) a lady came in and sat down very conspicuously in my line of sight. She remained there until the beginning of the last act. I do not complain of her coming late and going early; on the contrary, I wish she had come later and gone earlier. For this lady, who had very black hair, had stuck over her right ear the pitiable corpse of a large white bird, which looked exactly as if someone had killed it by stamping on its breast, and then nailed it to the lady's temple, which was presumably of sufficient solidity to bear the operation.

I am not, I hope, a morbidly squeamish person, but the spectacle sickened me. I presume that if I had presented myself at the doors with a dead snake round my neck, a collection of blackbeetles pinned to my shirtfront, and a grouse in my hair, I should have been refused admission. Why, then, is a woman to be allowed to commit such a public outrage?
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