|
Tchaikovsky |
|
TH 244 The Sad Fortunes of the Reverend Amos BartonПечальная судьба преподобного Амоса БартонаProjected opera (1893).
HistoryIn his biography of the composer, Modest Tchaikovsky recalled that "In his last year, Petr Il´ich’s favourite writer was George Eliot. He became acquainted with her works on one of his tours abroad and he began with this amazing woman’s masterpiece The Mill on the Floss. Only L. Tolstoi could rival her in Petr Il´ich’s esteem. Adam Bede, Silas Marner and Middlemarch all filled him with delight, and he read them not only once, but re-read them... Romola pleased him least of all, but after Mill on the Floss he liked the Scenes of Clerical Life the most" [1]. According to Modest, the composer intended to compose an opera on the subject of The Sad Fortunes of the Reverend Amos Barton, but later changed his mind in favour of Mister Gilfil’s Love-Story. There are no references to Amos Barton in other sources. From: The Tchaikovsky Handbook, vol. 1 (2002), p.
420–421 References:
|