ABSTRACT

The Muse has long been figured as a divine or erotically alluring consort to the virile male artist, who may inspire him or lead him to the edge of madness. This book explores the changing cultural expressions of the relationship between the male artist with a beloved, imagined or desired Muse, to offer new and penetrating perspectives on musical representations and transformations of creative masculine subjectivity, and important aspects of the shift from the styles and aesthetics of Romantic Idealism to Modernist Anxiety in music of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Each of the chapters begins with explorations into male artists' relationships with their Muse, and moves to analysis and interpretation which uncovers cultural constructions of masculine artistic inspiration and production, and their association with creatively inspiring and erotically charged relationships with a Muse. New insights are offered into the musical meaning and cultural significance of selected works by Rossini, Beethoven, Chopin, Liszt, Schumann, Wagner, Sibelius, Mahler, Bartók, Scriabin, Szymanowski, Debussy, Berg, Poulenc and Weill.

chapter 1|33 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|27 pages

The Muse as Immaculate Beloved

Stendhal’s ‘crystallization’ process and images of artistic creation in Rossini and Beethoven

chapter 4|24 pages

The Muse as Temptress and Redemptress

Sibelius’s early symphonic narratives

chapter 5|35 pages

Mahler’s Fifth and Sixth Symphonies

Idyllic fantasies, the sublime, formal mastery, and processes of mourning and reparation

chapter 6|21 pages

‘She Dies’

Trauma and erotic elegy in Bartók’s pre-First World War music

chapter 10|18 pages

Fetishistic ‘Inventions on a Chord’

Szymanowski, Schumann, Brahms, Wagner, Weill and Poulenc