
The First Four Notes
Beethoven's Fifth and the Human Imagination
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- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی

Starred review from September 17, 2012
Music’s most memorable da-da-da-dummm touched off a cultural and intellectual ferment that’s ably explored in this sparkling study. Boston Globe music critic Guerrieri opens with an engaging musicological investigation of how Ludwig van Beethoven orchestrated his Fifth Symphony’s urgent rhythms and unsettling harmonies into a work of unique emotional and rhetorical force: listeners agree that it says something powerful and profound, he notes, even if they can’t agree on what it’s saying. Guerrieri surveys the many meanings that have been attached to the Fifth, by novelists from E.M. Forster to Ralph Ellison and thinkers from Nietzsche to Sartre; by American transcendentalists and Chinese Maoists; by Nazis and their Allied opponents, who both claimed it as a symbol of their cause; by avant-garde composers, disco arrangers, and ring-tone purveyors. Guerrieri often wanders away from Beethoven for luxuriant digressions on German romanticism or Victorian patent laxatives, but clothes his erudition in lucid, breezy prose. He makes the muzziest musico-philosophical conceits accessible and relevant, while tossing off his own intriguing insights—“Beethoven’s heroic music is a lot like Steve McQueen’s acting”—with the flick of a baton. The result is a fresh, stimulating interpretation that shows how provocative the familiar classic can be.

June 1, 2012
Da-da-da-dum! Guerrieri, music critic for the Boston Globe, offers what looks to be the only book available to lay readers offering an in-depth examination of Beethoven's beloved and magisterial Fifth Symphony. If this book seems special, just remember that Beethoven has nearly a million followers on Facebook--take that, rock stars!
Copyright 2012 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

November 1, 2012
Music critic Guerrieri traces the cultural history of the most famous musical motif, recognized from its rhythm aloneda-da-da-dum (you know the tune). Identified with revolution right out of the gate, partly because La Marseillaise opens with the same rhythm, it was made to signify Fate by Beethoven's German literary contemporaries, to point to the ultimate by both Hegel's nationalizing epigones and the individualist American Transcendentalists, to be the repository of repressed Victorians' emotions, and to sound the death knell of the Third Reich (in Morse code, da-da-da-dum denotes V, as in victory). Guerrieri closely inspects those developments, bogging down some in the effusions of the notoriously recondite Hegel, Nietzsche, and Adorno, to be sure, before concluding with Samples, on the many uses pop culture has found for da-da-da-dumthe disco hit, A Fifth of Beethoven, is not the least consequential, he avers. For readers taught not to pile philosophical and literary baggage on music, the most enjoyable chapter may be the first, which places the motif in strictly music-historical context, but the others definitely have their fascinations.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2012, American Library Association.)
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