Joseph Horowitz
Wagner Nights: An American History.
University of California Press, 1994. First printing. 0520083946 xiv/389 pages.
Volume, measuring approximately 6.5" x 9.5", is purple cloth spine and red paper-covered boards, with stamped red lettering to spine. Book is like new. Dust jacket displays very light shelfwear.
"As never before or since, Richard Wagner's name dominated American music-making at the close of the nineteenth century. Europe, too, was obsessed with Wagner, but—as Joseph Horowitz shows in this first history of Wagnerism in the United States—the American obsession was unique.The central figure in "Wagner Nights" is conductor Anton Seidl (1850-1898), a priestly and enigmatic personage in New York musical life. Seidl's own admirers included the women of the Brooklyn-based Seidl Society, who wore the letter "S" on their dresses. In the summers, Seidl conducted fourteen times a week at Brighton Beach, filling the three-thousand-seat music pavilion to capacity. The fact that most Wagnerites were women was a distinguishing feature of American Wagnerism and constituted a vital aspect of the fin-de-siècle ferment that anticipated the New American Woman.
Drawing on the work of such cultural historians as T. Jackson Lears and Lawrence Levine, Horowitz's lively history reveals an "Americanized" Wagner never documented before. An entertaining and startling read, a treasury of operatic lore, "Wagner Nights" offers an unprecedented revisionist history of American culture a century ago."
top of page
$20.00Price
bottom of page



