The extraordinary life and musicianship of the man who fathered modern violin technique form the content of his biography by...

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PAGANINI

The extraordinary life and musicianship of the man who fathered modern violin technique form the content of his biography by a fellow violinist. Born in Genoa to a mother who received a vision of his destiny, Paganini soon found himself on the road to fame with a father to keep him in check. His overwhelming successes as a performer evoked many feelings in those who heard -- was he devilishly or divinely inspired? His many loves and amourous scrapes, his lasting friendship with Germi, his disappointing marriage to Bianchi which nevertheless brought him a devoted son occur alongside his musical contacts with such men as Beethoven, Berlioz, Liszt and Lipinsky. Heine's review of a concert is priceless reading; Balzac too comments and wonders at his gift. The impact of the intense, unstable personality of Paganini, the generous deeds -- such as playing in Paris through the cholera plague -- and the unkind once which, embellished by the legend of the mysteriously powerful musician, brought the refusal of a Church burial, evoke a vivid image of the man, in a biography which merges man and music successfully and gives a feeling of European life in Paganini's era.

Pub Date: Oct. 14, 1954

ISBN: 0837140137

Page Count: -

Publisher: McGraw-Hill

Review Posted Online: N/A

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 1, 1954

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