Review
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“Extraordinary . . . . Indeed, I cannot think of
another biography of a classical musician to which it can be
compared: in its breadth, , and encyclopedic command of
factual detail it reminds me of nothing so much as Robert A.
Caro’s The Power Broker. . . . Never before has [this] history
been told so well.”
- Tim Page, New York Review of Books
“[A] monumental new Toscanini biography. The most riveting pages
are devoted to the nineteen-thirties and forties, when the
conductor converted his favorite repertory―Beethoven, Verdi, and
Wagner―into emblems of the fight against Fascism. I couldn’t help
wondering: What would Toscanini have done if he had been
confronted by geomusical snarl in Hamburg? He might have had
something to say.”
- Alex Ross, The New Yorker
“Without doubt the most engaging, the best-written and certainly
the most comprehensive Toscanini yet to be published.”
- Rob Cowan, Gramophone
“A very engaging and at times gripping chronicle of music and
society, all of it devoted to the unending drive and
conscientiousness that made Toscanini’s performances so
riveting―and, to some, so repellent. . . . What comes through in
Sachs’s long chronicle is the extent of Toscanini’s role, witting
and unwitting, in transforming the way that classical music was
produced and consumed in the twentieth century.”
- David Denby, The New Yorker
“Sachs’s account is persuasive and compelling in the important
ways. . . . . Today, Toscanini is receding from our
consciousness, notwithstanding his many records. . . . Creative
geniuses can survive for centuries, even millenniums;
interpreters inevitably go over the cultural cliff. But that
doesn’t detract from the crucial―the central―role Toscanini
played in our musical culture for well over 60 years. Nor from
the almost universal regard he was held in as a man.”
- Robert Gottlieb, New York Times Book Review
“Toscanini’s significance as a superb artist and a key figure in
the international arena is brilliantly captured in Harvey Sachs’s
absorbing biography Toscanini: Musician of Conscience. . . .
[Sachs] paints a captivating portrait of the conductor, from his
birth in Parma in 1867 to his final days in New York 89 years
later. . . . [A] feast for those drawn to music, culture, and
politics.”
- Jonathan Rosenberg, Christian Science Monitor
“As a study of the life and times of one of the greatest
conductors of all time, this book will not soon be bettered.”
- Economist
“What cannot be denied is the fact that this new biography
constitutes a tremendous achievement for which both fans of the
conductor and music lovers in general will be eternally grateful.
. . Sach’s new biography looks to be the most authoritative work
on Toscanini that we are likely to see.”
- David Hurwitz, Classics Today
“'Sachs’ own dedication to this force of nature has been
fulfilled in a book which ranks among the best of 2017.”
- Philip Borg-Wheeler, Classical Music
“No other musician had as great an impact as Arturo Toscanini on
the performance of opera and symphonic music in the twentieth
century. With tremendous passion and stubbornness―and thanks to
his extraordinary talents―he reshaped our ideas about what a
conductor’s goals should be and how to achieve them.”
- James Levine
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About the Author
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Harvey Sachs is the author or coauthor of ten books
and has written for The New Yorker, the New York Times, and the
Times Literary Supplement, among others. He lives in New York,
and is on the faculty of the Curtis Institute of Music in
Philadelphia.
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