
Maurice Ravel
Emily Kilpatrick(Author)
Reaktion Books (Publisher)
Published on 1. July 2025
Book
Paperback/Softback
192 pages
978-1-83639-089-3 (ISBN)
Description
Maurice Ravel is one of the twentieth century's most intriguing and contradictory composers. This timely new biography - published for the 150th anniversary of his birth - describes Ravel's journey from Parisian apprentice to global musical icon. Drawing on fresh research, Emily Kilpatrick reveals Ravel as both a daring provocateur and a reflective elder, his lifelong quest for originality driven by his deep love of history and literature. Set against a background of profound cultural and political upheaval, Ravel's story unfolds through his battles with the artistic establishment, his creative resilience after wartime losses and the tragic incapacitation of his final years. The result is an intimate portrait of a composer whose music continues to enchant and challenge audiences worldwide.
Reviews / Votes
Affecting in her examination of Ravel's life - her account of his final illness is astonishingly moving - Kilpatrick's discussions of the music are, in contrast, succinct, cool and finely judged . . . [Her study] packs a great deal of thought and information into a relatively short space, and often encourages us to think afresh about its subject, which makes it more than well worth reading. -- Tim Ashley * Gramophone * The composer's remarkable achievement - and elements of his closed private life - are provocatively addressed in this elegantly written study in Reaktion Books' Critical Lives series . . . one of the most valuable and insightful books on Ravel ever written. -- Barry Forshaw * CD Choice * A concise and very well-written short biography drawing on the best existing sources, while also providing a fresh perspective on Ravel's life and works . . . an ideal introduction to the man and his music. * Nigel Simeone, author of Olivier Messiaen: Music, Art and Literature * In her engaging biography of this beloved, quintessential French composer, Emily Kilpatrick explains that "language, literature and historical conversation" underpin the thread of her narrative, "for it is here that we find the most revealing intersections of practice and aesthetic - and perhaps, too, the most sustainable accommodations of self and art". In addition to the excellent, well-researched writing, there are 37 plates containing interesting photographs as well as reproductions of Ravel manuscripts. This impressive achievement is highly recommended. * Arbie Orenstein, American musicologist, pianist and author of Ravel: Man and Musician * An insightful biography of the complex, ever-enigmatic Ravel, which places his life, music and aesthetic in their cultural context. Generous illustrations, including letters and manuscripts, enrich the telling of Ravel's story. The research is up-to-date, and the writing is scholarly yet accessible. * Deborah Mawer, Emeritus Professor of Music, Royal Birmingham Conservatoire, UK * Kilpatrick is to be commended for balancing rigorous scholarship with a humanizing element, making readers care about the characters they encounter . . . [She] packs much into a short volume. Essential reading for those with the musical background. -- Barry Zaslow * Library Journal *More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Illustrations
37 illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 196 mm
Width: 129 mm
Thickness: 14 mm
Weight
298 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-83639-089-3 (9781836390893)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Emily Kilpatrick is an Associate Professor at the Royal Academy of Music, London. Her books include French Art Song: History of a New Music, 1870-1914 (2022).
Content
Preface
1 The Engineer, the Basque
and the Dandy
2 Agent
Provocateur
3 Dances With History
4 An Unknown
Destination
5 The Compositional
Machine
6 Dissolving
References
Bibliography
Acknowledgements
Photo Acknowledgements
1 The Engineer, the Basque
and the Dandy
2 Agent
Provocateur
3 Dances With History
4 An Unknown
Destination
5 The Compositional
Machine
6 Dissolving
References
Bibliography
Acknowledgements
Photo Acknowledgements