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Benjamin Britten: A Biography (1992)

door Humphrey Carpenter

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1544177,337 (3.87)13
"This is the long-awaited full-scale biography of Benjamin Britten, one of the greatest composers and musicians of the twentieth century. Working independently but with the full cooperation of Britten's estate, Humphrey Carpenter has used Britten's diaries, letters and manuscripts, as well as the recollections of the people closest to Britten, to create an enthralling narrative of genius in action." "Humphrey Carpenter, the renowned biographer of W. H. Auden, J. R. R. Tolkien and Ezra Pound, reveals Britten, who died in 1976 at the age of sixty-three, as a man whose personality and musical brilliance were magnetic from the start. For nearly forty years, Britten enjoyed a secure homosexual "marriage" to Peter Pears, interpreter par excellence of his music, yet he was racked by depression and self-doubt, and was driven to form a series of dangerously close friendships with young boys. Carpenter illuminates Britten's key relationships with such luminaries as W. H. Auden, Christopher Isherwood, Aaron Copland, Mstislav Rostropovich, E. M. Forster and Dame Janet Baker, and his exhaustive research has uncovered the very private backgrounds of many of Britten's most famous works, including The Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra, War Requiem, Peter Grimes, Billy Budd, Death in Venice and The Turn of the Screw. Written with the vividness and freshness of approach that characterize all of Carpenter's books, this remarkable biography draws an unforgettable portrait of a man who was, in Leonard Bernstein's words, "at odds with the world.""--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved… (meer)
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Toon 4 van 4
In some ways the most interesting thing about this book is the extremely heated antagonism which the mere mention of its author provokes in those who claim, more or less, to have known Benjamin Britten himself. This is a phenomenon which I have experienced several times - and each time found puzzling. I do not think that Humphrey Carpenter makes Britten out to have been a sex maniac, even of an obscurely sublimated kind: I found his descriptions of the music lucid, balanced, and persuasive, and his evocation of the whole mood which surrounds the subject seems plausible enough to me. His exposition of the processes by which many of the important works came to be written is extremely helpful. That said, it does remain striking that Benjamin Britten - the myth possibly more than the music - evokes such passion, bordering on worship, in his acolytes; and the psychological - including, let it be said, the psychosexual - intensity of so much of his own poetic and musical preoccupation is, surely, a subject of legitimate discussion: the ghost of Britten which sometimes lingers as an abstraction of disembodied perfection is itself unpersuasive and in some ways troubling. I think that this book and the responses which it has provoked continue to provide a helpful framework through which we can begin, perhaps, to step back a bit from the mythology, and listen afresh to music which is often of extremely high quality, and almost always beautiful and interesting. And if we are troubled by some aspects of Britten and his boys - discussed very fully also in John Bridcut's book - this may reflect at least as much of our own social and cultural anxiety as that of the subject himself. ( )
  readawayjay | Jun 8, 2011 |
I haven't read any of Carpenter's other books, nor can I read music. That said, I found this a most engrossing study of both Britten and his works. Given the circles in which the composer moved (Auden, Isherwood, Cranko, etc.) it is inevitable that the issue of Britten's homosexuality should feature prominently in this biography, and I thought that the subject was tackled with thought and sobriety. Carpenter's analyses of Britten's major works were most revealing (even to a layman like me) and made me want to listen to and understand his music better. This is no hagiography, but a fine account of the life and times of a troubled man. ( )
1 stem cappybear | Feb 23, 2009 |
A considerable decline in quality from Carpenter's book on Ezra Pound, which, to my mind, is one of the best literary biographies on offer. A quick scan of the index to this book gives the reader a mighty good clue as to what Carpenter is up to. By far the two most populous entries are, under the general heading "Britten, Benjamin, Character" -- "sexuality" and "estrangements." Britten's homosexuality is clearly considered to have driven everything in his life, including his music, his family connections, his friendships, his ambitions, his hypochondria, really the list is inexhaustible. As a result, he is portrayed as an unregenerate seducer and abandoner -- not carnally, but emotionally. Great care is taken to establish that there is no evidence of Britten's ever consummating a sexual relationship with any of the young boys he took pains to befriend over the course of his life. Indeed, it appears that Britten's sex life may have consisted only of a monogamous, on his part, commitment to the tenor Peter Pears. Yet the book details a long litany of instances of Britten's success in serially charming men, women and children, only to reject them, often quite brutally, when they ceased to fill his need. At least, that's Carpenter's take. I suppose, like any other entertainment, biography succeeds best with a hearty dose of sex & violence (at least of the emotional variety.) Thankfully, the freudianism is fairly muted, only dwelling on outcomes and not on etiology. What cannot be countenanced, however, are the mind-boggling number of misprints, typos, gaffes and obvious howlers that are absolutely astonishing considering Carpenters previously immaculate productions on Pound and Auden. Deadlines -- they're a bitch! ( )
1 stem jburlinson | Jun 22, 2008 |
This new biography is typical of the author's style: comprehensive, probing, and objective. Access to materials from the estate of renowned English composer Edward Benjamin Britten (1913-76) enabled Carpenter to write an enlightening study that focuses on Britten's homosexuality and how it influenced his work. Throughout his life, Britten achieved significant accomplishments yet never felt completely accepted. He followed a strict code of perfectionism, suffered from bouts of depression, and found it difficult to "loosen up." Wrapped around his spirit, though, was the peculiar thrust of artistic drive that is so characteristic of brilliance. Britten received accolades during his lifetime, but full appreciation and acknowledgement did not come until after his death. While much has been written about Britten in the past 17 years, Carpenter's book is an important contribution.

A first-rate, if somewhat less than magisterial, treatment by Carpenter (The Brideshead Generation, 1990, etc.) of the life and works of one of the 20th century's towering musical figures--the man who put English music firmly on the larger European map. This is like a run-through of a great symphony by a major orchestra under a more-than-adequate international conductor. All the notes--Carpenter's prodigious research--are firmly in place.
  antimuzak | Oct 29, 2005 |
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Especially I would like to mention whether your purpose is to give a comfortable or an uncomfortable picture, the true or the fictitious. This sounds terribly threatening, but truly it is not meant to be. I just feel most strongly that BB can survive the truth and still come through as one of the most supreme and lovable persons that ever lived, but if the whole truth is not told this image will in fact be impaired and will limp into history. (Stephen Reiss to the author, 5th February 1991).
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"This is the long-awaited full-scale biography of Benjamin Britten, one of the greatest composers and musicians of the twentieth century. Working independently but with the full cooperation of Britten's estate, Humphrey Carpenter has used Britten's diaries, letters and manuscripts, as well as the recollections of the people closest to Britten, to create an enthralling narrative of genius in action." "Humphrey Carpenter, the renowned biographer of W. H. Auden, J. R. R. Tolkien and Ezra Pound, reveals Britten, who died in 1976 at the age of sixty-three, as a man whose personality and musical brilliance were magnetic from the start. For nearly forty years, Britten enjoyed a secure homosexual "marriage" to Peter Pears, interpreter par excellence of his music, yet he was racked by depression and self-doubt, and was driven to form a series of dangerously close friendships with young boys. Carpenter illuminates Britten's key relationships with such luminaries as W. H. Auden, Christopher Isherwood, Aaron Copland, Mstislav Rostropovich, E. M. Forster and Dame Janet Baker, and his exhaustive research has uncovered the very private backgrounds of many of Britten's most famous works, including The Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra, War Requiem, Peter Grimes, Billy Budd, Death in Venice and The Turn of the Screw. Written with the vividness and freshness of approach that characterize all of Carpenter's books, this remarkable biography draws an unforgettable portrait of a man who was, in Leonard Bernstein's words, "at odds with the world.""--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved

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