Over the past five decades, JOHN MAUCERI has conducted symphonies, operas, ballets, musicals, and film music around the world, and served as music director of four opera companies and three orchestras, as well as hosted television and radio programs. He has more than seventy albums to his name, and is the recipient of a Grammy, a Tony, a Billboard, two Diapasons d'or, three Emmys, and four Deutschen Schallplattenkritik awards. He is the author of Maestros and Their Music: The Art and Alchemy of Conducting, and has written for The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The Times of London, and The Huffington Post, among other publications. He lives in New York City.
Mauceri's love letter will provoke newbies to give classical a
whirl and inspire fans to listen with fresh ears.
*Publishers Weekly*
John Mauceri has done it again with this wonderful book. I learned
a lot, at my advanced age, and am thankful for the pleasure it
brought me. I recommend it to all.
*Marilyn Horne*
Any amateur for whom music is one the chief pleasures in life, but
who longs always for a deeper understanding of the language of the
classical concert than can be had from liner notes and his or her
own intuitions, will be grateful for John Mauceri's new book-it
makes understanding how music works almost as pleasurable as
listening to it.
*Adam Gopnik*
This delightful book is not so much the opening of a door as an
affectionate hand on the arm, guiding the reader with enthusiasm
and intelligence into a world of beauty which reaches to the very
heart of what makes human life of value.
*Stephen Hough*
Having grown up with a father whose passion for music was
tsunami-like in its intensity, I quickly recognized and welcomed a
similar joy in John Mauceri's meditations on the repertoire he
loves so much. Every page warms us with the fires of his lifelong
devotion. His book gives us precisely what Mauceri tells us the
music itself will provide: 'a most rewarding journey.
*Jamie Bernstein, author of Famous Father Girl: A Memoir of Growing
Up Bernstein*
The title is accurate: it really is for the love of music that
Mauceri writes . . . What he wants in the book is to share that
pleasure; not just sensuous enjoyment, but avenues of intellectual
and philosophical exploration and self-exploration
*TLS*
Eloquent and inspiring . . . Mauceri skillfully incorporates his
musical experiences, from his youth to the present . . . The
perfect companion for those who are already well versed in
classical music and for those ready to take the plunge
*Library Journal*
Classical-music aficionados will enjoy Mauceri's discussions of
composers and their works. Newbies will find them instructive, but
the author would caution all readers to not just take his word for
it, but to experience the music and hear for themselves
*Booklist*
The author's joy for music is infectious . . . Even those who know
classical music well will learn something from this lively and
enthusiastic primer
*Kirkus*
For the Love of Music returns to the idea of music as a compendium
of memory, tied to nostalgia, to personal experience and, overall,
to the pleasure one might find in the endless variation of how it
might be listened to yet again
*Shelf Awareness (starred review)*
Magnificent. . . [this] book gives the audience power, confidence,
and joy. If you commit to entering this world, you will be
rewarded
*New York Journal of Books*
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