[Edward MacDowell by Lawrence Gilman]@TWC D-Link book
Edward MacDowell

CHAPTER IV
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23), completed a year later, is fairly within the class of that order of music which it has been generally agreed to describe as "absolute." It is innocent of any programme, save for the fact that some of the ideas prompted by "Much Ado About Nothing," which were to form a "Beatrice and Benedick" symphonic poem, were, as I have related in a previous chapter, incorporated in the scherzo.

Together with its companion work, the first piano concerto; the "Romanza" for 'cello and orchestra; the concert study, op.

36, and such conventional _morceaux_ as the early "Serenata" and "Barcarolle" (of which, it should be noted, there are extremely few among his productions), it represents the very limited body of his writing which does not, in some degree, propose and enforce a definite poetic concept.

Not elsewhere in his earlier work has MacDowell marshalled the materials of his art with so confident an artistry as he exhibits in this concerto.

In substance the work is not extraordinary.


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