Selected Letters

Selected Letters of Michael Tippett

Thomas Schuttenhelm



Throughout his life, which spanned the greater part of the twentieth century (1905-1998), Sir Michael Tippett was a prolific letter-writer. He wrote to a vast number of people over the years, including family, friends and lovers, colleagues in the music world, journalists, poets, dramatists and politicians. Published to coincide with the centenary of Tippett’s birth, these carefully selected letters provide us with a first hand account of the composer’s private and professional experiences, revealing a uniquely personal view which until now has remained largely unknown to the public.

Bearing witness to the atrocities and advancements of the twentieth century, these letters display a fiercely creative mind struggling to construct a universal artistic expression. His correspondence places the reader at the composer’s side, within the historical moment, as a witness to the creative process. Writing open, uninhibited letters became common practice for Tippett, his candid tone lending itself to tackling a wide range of personal and social issues. From the bombing of his cottage in Oxted, to the ecstatic experience of artistic breakthrough that led to progress on a new composition, each new event and accomplishment is documented with clarity and urgency.

 

About the Author

Thomas Schuttenhelm is a composer, performer and scholar – he became acquainted with the music of Tippett as a student and met the composer, when he visited Albany USA in 1992 for a festival of his music. Since Tippett’s death he has been active in academic circles giving lectures and seminars, and organizing activities for the 2005 centenary

 

                        

 15 September 2005
0 571 22600 0
£25.00
Royal 8vo Hardback
480 pp

 

 

·  It is the riveting but awful nitty gritty of being, or initially trying to be a professional composer that emerges powerfully from these pages...He also emerges as a champion of the underdog and of young composers...The Selected Letters of Michael Tippett is an important insight into a highly idiosyncratic mind. It also documents a struggle triumphantly won - Tippett was very much at ease with himself at the end of his life; a celebrated composer of considerable achievement. - The Guardian
 
·  [The letters] paint a vivid portrait of a complex creative personality...this selection is of inestimable value. - Gramophone Magazine
 
·  What gives this book its particular charm is the mix of grand and mundane: in a wartime letter about pacifism and the progress of A Child of our Time he also gives a recipe for real porridge. And the letters towards the end - adulterous epistles to his young lover Meirion Bowen, full of the lies he was telling his long-term partner Karl Hawker - have all the force of a soap opera. Great fun.
- Classic FM Magazine
 
·  [An] intriguing volume of letters ... His accounts of his homosexuality, as of his pacifism, have become documents of their time ... His friendships spring off the page with warmth and evident devotion. - Vicki Woods, The Spectator
 
·  ... often richly fascinating, even where the personality laid bare is less than prepossessing. As man and artist, Tippett seems to have been wholly self-centred while at the same time retaining a bemusing ability to observe himself as if he were someone else ... The letters reel between naivety and shrewdness, courage and vanity, the business-like and the dotty. - Bayan Northcott, BBC Music Magazine
 
·  Reading his copious letters ... is very much like hearing him talk ... Elsewhere, Tippett "sigh[s] all the time for your wonderful ease of composition, and what I can steal I do.". This is one of 35 letters to Britten ... that have obivious historical importance. So does this centennial volume as a whole. - Paul Driver, The Sunday Times

(09/21/2005)



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