Show Us Your (Music Book) Library

Started by Mister Sharpe, September 26, 2025, 01:14:38 PM

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Mister Sharpe

Here's my little music library; I call it that affectionately, but also in my mind's eye, accurately.  For my wife it looms extra large. (She is a devotee of minimalism).  :laugh:  I did the best I could to photograph it so you might see the titles therein.  I've room for a few more, you can see!  (I should add that this photo doesn't include the French and German titles, kept separately). Please do share your collection with us!   
"We need great performances of lesser works more than we need lesser performances of great ones." Alex Ross

Mandryka

Wovon man nicht sprechen kann, darĂ¼ber muss man schweigen

Spotted Horses



It would have been two, but I seem to have disposed of my copy of Grout.
Formerly Scarpia (Scarps), Baron Scarpia, Ghost of Baron Scarpia, Varner, Ratliff, Parsifal, perhaps others.

Kalevala

Quote from: Mister Sharpe on September 26, 2025, 01:14:38 PMHere's my little music library; I call it that affectionately, but also in my mind's eye, accurately.  For my wife it looms extra large. (She is a devotee of minimalism).  :laugh:  I did the best I could to photograph it so you might see the titles therein.  I've room for a few more, you can see!  (I should add that this photo doesn't include the French and German titles, kept separately). Please do share your collection with us!   
Can't see most of the titles.  I see Groves and perhaps a couple of music guides (Penguin's?).  Books 4&5 on the bottom look familiar.

Without counting shelves at the moment...downstairs I have a number of books on opera including composers and biographies or autobiographies on a number of singers...a smattering on opera houses and a couple on people like Walter Legge.  A few books on some other composers.  Upstairs: some more books mixed into cases containing CDs and LPs and a cabinet full of a number of old "Opera News" [= Met] magazines [Lots of fun to look at!].

K

Kalevala

I should add (and no, I'm not going to count them now!), @Tsaraslondon , the most books that I have on one singer is [and you all have already guessed this] Maria Callas.   :)

K

Kalevala

@Mister Sharpe Are the two books that I had mentioned (bottom shelf and fourth and fifth in from the left) ones on Wagner?

K
Quote from: Spotted Horses on September 29, 2025, 12:45:17 PM

It would have been two, but I seem to have disposed of my copy of Grout.

What do you think of that book by Harnoncourt?

K

Mister Sharpe

Quote from: Kalevala on September 29, 2025, 01:44:56 PM@Mister Sharpe Are the two books that I had mentioned (bottom shelf and fourth and fifth in from the left) ones on Wagner?

Noooo, but thank you for playing! They are Vols. 1 and 2 of Milton Cross's New Encyclopedia of the Great Composers and Their Music (extensively revised and enlarged), a birthday present from my Mum in 1971. I was working on a paper about Kurt Weill then and she was disappointed those books had little to offer about that composer  :( .
"We need great performances of lesser works more than we need lesser performances of great ones." Alex Ross

Kalevala

Quote from: Mister Sharpe on September 29, 2025, 02:12:12 PMNoooo, but thank you for playing! They are Vols. 1 and 2 of Milton Cross's New Encyclopedia of the Great Composers and Their Music (extensively revised and enlarged), a birthday present from my Mum in 1971. I was working on a paper about Kurt Weill then and she was disappointed those books had little to offer about that composer  :( .
LOL :)

K

p.s.  Boy, the program was given me grief tonight! :-(

Florestan

Biographies of Mozart, Schubert, Chopin, Verdi and Ravel, a two-volume history of music, a dictionary of musicians and musical terms, two books by a late famous Romanian critic plus a book of Furtwaengler's selected writings, Romain Rolland's Beethoven, Berlioz's Memoirs, Stravinsky's Poetics of Music and Yehudi Menuhin's The Music of Man. All in Romanian (original or translation).
"Beauty must appeal to the senses, must provide us with immediate enjoyment, must impress us or insinuate itself into us without any effort on our part." - Claude Debussy