ABSTRACT

In a wide-ranging study of sentimentalism’s significance for styles, practices and meanings of music in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, a series of interpretations scrutinizes musical expressions of sympathetic responses to suffering and the longing to belong. The book challenges hierarchies of artistic value and the associated denigration of sentimental feeling in gendered discourses. Fresh insights are thereby developed into sentimentalism’s place in musical constructions of emotion, taste, genre, gender, desire, and authenticity.

The contexts encompass diverse musical communities, performing spaces, and listening practices, including the nineteenth-century salon and concert hall, the cinema, the intimate stage persona of the singer-songwriter, and the homely ambiguities of ‘easy’ listening. Interdisciplinary insights inform discussions of musical form, affect, appropriation, nationalisms, psychologies, eco-sentimentalism, humanitarianism, consumerism, and subject positions, with a particular emphasis on masculine sentimentalities.

Music is drawn from violin repertory associated with Joseph Joachim, the piano music of Chopin, Schumann, and Liszt, sentimental waltzes from Schubert to Ravel, concert music by Bartók, Szymanowski and Górecki, the Merchant-Ivory adaptation of The Remains of the Day, Antônio Carlos Jobim’s bossa nova, and songs by Duke Ellington, Burt Bacharach, Carole King, Barry Manilow and Jimmy Webb.

The book will attract readers interested in both the role of music in the history of emotion and the persistence and diversity of sentimental arts after their flowering in the eighteenth-century age of sensibility.

chapter 1|28 pages

Introduction

Getting sentimental

part I|54 pages

Spaces

chapter 302|28 pages

Sentimental virtues in the Victorian salon

Joseph Joachim on the lawn and in the lounge

chapter 3|24 pages

Feeling and design magnified

The place and status of sentimental music in the nineteenth-century concert hall

part II|54 pages

Genres

chapter 844|22 pages

Sentimental waltzes

Tender steps from Goethe to Ravel

chapter 5|30 pages

Longing to belong

Nationalism, sentimentalism, and the Second Violin Concertos of Bartók and Szymanowski

part III|38 pages

Psychologies

chapter 1386|18 pages

Masochism and sentimentality

Barthes's Schumann and Schumann's Chopin

chapter 7|18 pages

Two sentimental English gentlemen

‘Screen memories’, a Schubert Lied and the voice of Gracie Fields in Merchant-Ivory's The Remains of the Day

part IV|50 pages

Appropriations

chapter 1768|16 pages

Ellington, Liszt, and Chopin's death bed

chapter 9|17 pages

Chopin on the beach

Bossa nova, Tom Jobim's ‘Insensatez’, and sentimental ecology

chapter 10|15 pages

Chopin and the power ballad

Barry Manilow's ‘Could it be Magic’

part V|50 pages

Sympathies

chapter 22611|27 pages

Make it ‘easy’?

Sentimental subject positions in songs of Burt Bacharach and Hal David

chapter 12|21 pages

Homes and roads

The song-writing of Carole King and Jimmy Webb

part Coda|26 pages

Compassion, mediation, and the consumer

chapter 27613|24 pages

Górecki's tears/our tears