RUTH GILLEN, a pianist, studied with the duo-pianists Vronsky and Babin, and with Konrad Wolff. She is a graduate of the High School of Music and Art in New York City, and received Bachelor and Master of Arts degrees from Hunter College and Columbia University respectively.
Prologue by Leon Fleisher
Foreword by Russell Sherman
Composers
Frescobaldi
Bach
Bach-Reger
Mozart
Beethoven
Schubert
Schumann
Liszt
Stravinsky
Letters: Paul Badura-Skoda (review of Schnabel's Interpretation of Piano Music), Paul Henry Lang, Rudolf Serkin, Leon Fleisher, Arthur Schnabel, Sviatoslav Richter
Miscellany
Christmas Music
Music Appreciation, etc.
The Brendel-Wolff "Debate"
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Even after acquiring the Doctor of Laws degree from both the University of Berlin and the Sorbonne (discussed in a letter, along with the effects of living in Europe during the Nazi era), Konrad Wolff's enthusiasm for music was so overwhelming that he became a professional musician in his mid-thirties. That enthusiasm is contagious. The more one reads his work, the more one understands music, but perhaps of greater importance, the more one loves it.
This is the only collection of a substantial quantity of his prolific writings (many never published before) under one cover. With almost 200 musical illustrations and his engaging style of writing, teachers, students, and sophisticated music lovers will find articles such as Schubert's Reaction to Beethoven, Bach's Last Work, and Beethovenian Dissonances in Listz's Piano Music a pleasurable read and an easy way to learn. Correspondence with Sviatoslav Richter, among others, and a brilliant debate between Wolff and Alfred Brendel are unique contributions. Also impressive is the breadth of Wolff's culture. As one scholar who had read the manuscript exclaimed: The writing is so brilliant that it can be applied to fields other than music, as well.