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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Passionate Man, April 25, 2000
By 
Bruce Loveitt (Ogdensburg, NY USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Berlioz: Volume One: The Making of an Artist, 1803-1832 (Hardcover)
This is a wonderful book both for the lay reader and for the musically knowledgeable. It says a great deal about how well written this book is that someone like me who knows nothing about music could still enjoy the book so much. Mr. Cairns takes the tale from the birth of Berlioz in 1803 up until 1832, when he was in his late 20's. You learn about his relationship with his parents, who were opposed to his choice of composer for a career, and his sisters. We are very fortunate that this was a great age for letter writing. Mr. Cairns makes judicious use of the correspondence between Berlioz and his family and friends to the point where you almost feel yourself to be a friend or family member. You get inside the young composer's mind as he tries to convince his parents that his desire to write music is not just a "whim", but something that he is absolutely passionate about and must do. Berlioz was also extremely sensitive and romantic. After seeing the English actress Harriet Smithson perform on stage in several works by Shakespeare he developed an obsessive love for her, even though he had never met her. He had an apartment across the street from where she lived and would longingly watch her comings and goings. He eventually wrote her several notes expressing his feelings but she rebuffed him, quite understandably one would think! (She had also heard a rumor, which was untrue, that he was an epileptic.) Shortly after coming to the realization that Smithson was unattainable Berlioz met the virtuoso pianist Camille Moke and they fell in love with each other and eventually got engaged. Alas, when poor Hector had to go to Rome to live in order to receive grant money from winning the Prix de Rome, Camille dumped him and opted for security by marrying a wealthy man. This soured Hector on women for awhile but did not diminish his love for music, nature and life. Mr. Cairns has been a professional music critic and is also a scholar, so he understands and ably explains the technical aspects of Berlioz's music. I was totally lost in these sections but my ignorance did not diminish my enjoyment of this sympathetic and wonderfully written book.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Incredible., May 13, 2000
This review is from: Berlioz: Volume One: The Making of an Artist, 1803-1832 (Hardcover)
This really is one of the best biographies of any subject to come my way.I didn't know a lot of Berlioz's music before approaching this but it didn't actually matter.All the elements of a gripping novel are here only for they're true!-fighting paternal disapproval,living in poverty in Paris,eloping with a virtuoso pianist-it's all here and Cairns paints such an intimate picture that you can't but fail to admire Berlioz and his dogged determination to be a composer and write HIS music only to be continually rebuked in his native homeland.The efforts that the man had to go to just to hear his own music is truly heartbreaking.Biography doesn't get much better than this-especially if you're only even remotely interested in music or art.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Scholar, September 19, 2001
By 
Alfred H. Harris (Pebble Beach, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Berlioz: Volume One: The Making of an Artist, 1803-1832 (Hardcover)
David Cairns is a great Berlioz scholar. Like to meet him someday. His translation of "Memoirs" is much superior to Newmans.I bought the 1st volume of the biography some years ago when it first came out and the second a couple of years ago when it was first published. I revisit these volumes frequently. Berlioz was one of the really great romantics. At least 50 years before his time. Glad to see SF opera is planning on staging Cellini & B & B over the next few years. Sixtus Beckmesser
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5.0 out of 5 stars Soylent Dick Says: Great Biography About a Great Composer, September 20, 2011
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This biography is, without doubt, the most comprehensive musical biography I have ever read. David Cairns goes to great lengths to place Berlioz in his historical and social setting. The historical aspects (both the musical and general history). At the same time, he makes a concerted effort to tell the story objectively.

I feel the writing could be slightly improved in two ways. Cairns has a tendency to write extremely long sentences. I sometimes find that when I reach the end, I need to re-read the sentence to get the main point of it.

I also think that he could have added a bit more spice by quoting more from Berlioz himself; especially the memoirs. The wit and humour of the memoirs would have added invaluable bite to this already excellent book!

As it is, after having read the memoirs, this book is the perfect follow-up
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant portrait of a complex man, vol. 1, January 27, 2004
By 
Judge Knott "judge_knott" (Upper West Side, NY, NY) - See all my reviews
An amazing biography. A work such as this will most likely appeal to only 1 out of 100,000 Amazon customers, but those who read it will never forget it, and once having read it will listen to Berlioz's music with a knowing insider's grin.

Cairns has done what is extremely difficult: he has created an easy-to-read, engaging, yet methodical and thorough modern biography in English of a composer who was born 200 years ago and whose paper trail was written entirely in French. The book has good humor but is not fawning or hagiographic.

A little note (pun intended): this is about Berlioz the man, and not about Berlioz as an ethnomusicologist's project. In other words, this is the study of a young man and how he came to know and create music, but not about that music per se.

Bonne lecture!

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Berlioz: Volume One: The Making of an Artist, 1803-1832
Berlioz: Volume One: The Making of an Artist, 1803-1832 by David Cairns (Hardcover - March 6, 2000)
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