edited by Delphine Vincent, Turnhout, Brepols, 2024 (Contemporary Composers, 6), pp. xx+354, ISBN 978-2-503-61185-3.
A major figure in the world of contemporary music, Max Richter has barely been studied by scholars. This collective book wishes to open new avenues of reflection on this fundamental composer of the early 21st century and to explore his personality in all its diversity.
Although Richter’s music opens up traditional musical genres, the present volume addresses the principal fields in which Richter is active: solo album, concert hall music, ballet, film and television series music and innovative projects such as Sleep. It highlights three recurring aspects in Richter’s works: history, memory and nostalgia which are to be considered key ingredients in the composer’s aesthetic.
Indeed, Richter displays a close relationship with the past, which he constantly revisits in order to show the present in a new light. Both musical and textual intertextuality are at the heart of his work, which borrows extensively from the classical repertoire and from Weltliteratur. Richter’s postmodern approach explores the way in which the musical signified is constructed, the role music plays in our society, and the connection between music and the past and collective memory. The present volume is a broad exploration – which does not claim to be exhaustive – of these recurrent fundamental topics in Richter’s production.
A large team of international scholars has been assembled, coming from both minimalism and film music studies, philosophy and music performance in order to offer a variety of disciplinary perspectives on Richter’s work.
Delphine Vincent is senior researcher in musicology at Fribourg University, where she obtain her Ph.D. (2011) and her Habilitation (2019). Her research interests include film music, contemporary music, gender studies, Swiss music, and opera staging. She is notably the author of Film into Opera: From Operatic to Cinematic Dramaturgy? (2023), and Musique classique à l’écran et perception culturelle (2012). She has edited Mythologies romandes: Gustave Doret et la musique nationale (2018) and Verdi on Screen (2015).
The present volume has been made possibile by the friendly support of the Université de Fribourg.