This book traces the unique attraction Scotland has had for the
great eighteenth- and nineteenth-century composers. It is not about
Scottish composers, but rather about the music that for two
centuries was written and performed outside Scotland by musicians
of other countries who had Scotland in mind. Hitherto far more has
been known about this attraction in Germany and France than in
Britain, but Roger Fiske here puts this right and shows how nearly
all the major composers from Purcell to Brahms were affected - most
notably Schubert, Mendelssohn and Bruch, but also Haydn, Beethoven,
Chopin and Schumann. In particular, Dr Fiske describes the travels
of Mendelssohn and Chopin in more detail than has been attempted
before. There are two major influences to be found in this
enthusiasm for Scotland. The first is Scotch song, a generic term
commonly used in eighteenth-century England for a type of popular
song. The second is Scottish literature, especially Macpherson's
Ossian and the writings of Sir Walter Scott and Robert Burns:
Scotland influenced continental literature as well as inspiring
some fine music.
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