Counterpoint, Philip Kennicott
Counterpoint, Philip Kennicott
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Counterpoint
A Memoir of Bach and Mourning

Author: Philip Kennicott

Narrator: Paul Heitsch

Unabridged: 8 hr 57 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 02/18/2020


Synopsis

A Pulitzer Prize–winning critic reflects on the meaning and emotional impact of a Bach masterwork.

As his mother was dying, Philip Kennicott began to listen to the music of Bach obsessively. It was the only music that didn't seem trivial or irrelevant, and it enabled him to both experience her death and remove himself from it. For him, Bach's music held the elements of both joy and despair, life and its inevitable end. He spent the next five years trying to learn one of the composer's greatest keyboard masterpieces, the Goldberg Variations. In Counterpoint, he recounts his efforts to rise to the challenge, and to fight through his grief by coming to terms with his memories of a difficult, complicated childhood.

He describes the joys of mastering some of the piano pieces, the frustrations that plague his understanding of others, the technical challenges they pose, and the surpassing beauty of the melodies, harmonies, and counterpoint that distinguish them. While exploring Bach's compositions he sketches a cultural history of playing the piano in the twentieth century. And he raises two questions that become increasingly interrelated, not unlike a contrapuntal passage in one of the variations itself: What does it mean to know a piece of music? What does it mean to know another human being?

About Philip Kennicott

Philip Kennicott, the senior art and architecture critic of the Washington Post and a former contributing editor for the New Republic, won the Pulitzer Prize for Criticism in 2013. He lives in Washington, DC.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Heather

I chose to review “Counterpoint: A Memoir of Bach and Mourning” by Philip Kennicott for two reasons. I’ve been in mourning since my husband died in April 2019 and I love baroque music (JS Bach is the master). The author is a gifted writer. Philip Kennicott is the chief Art and Architecture Critic of......more

Goodreads review by Joshua

A memoir about the author, dealing with the grief of the death of his mother, attempting to learn Bach's Goldberg Variations on piano as a kind of therapy. At times, I felt the text quite moving, but felt the many disparate elements of the author's personal story, the analysis of the music, and Bach......more

Goodreads review by Hank

Beautiful, upsetting, redemptive, informative -- written with such care. A strange but brilliant melding of memoir and music education, going deep on a troubled mother-son relationship and the son's attempt to try something that's as difficult (playing Bach's Goldberg Variations on the piano) as com......more