The most extensive review comes to us from Mark Sealey of Classical.net
"Toccata Press is marketed and distributed by the ever-enterprising Boydell and Brewer. Toccata's website provides this background and rationale for the major publication, Adolf Busch: the Life of an Honest Musician: "As the sister company of the CD label Toccata Classics, Toccata Press is expressly dedicated to tackling important subjects that other publishers have failed to address." And so it does in this mammoth title, which was published in the middle of September 2010. Adolf Busch: the Life of an Honest Musician is the work of author – Scottish writer Tully Potter. Potter was born in 1942 has made a special study of performance practice and contributes widely to music publications – in the UK in particular".
"Adolf Busch: the Life of an Honest Musician is the first full length study of the German violinist and composer Adolf Busch, who was born in 1891 and died in 1952 at the age of just 60. Considered the finest player of his instrument for much of the first half of the last century, he was also leader of the legendary Busch Quartet, and was a also a minor composer. This long study (at a grand total of over 1,400 pages, in two beautifully-produced hardback, volumes, with a correspondingly "handsome" price) traces Bush's life from child prodigy in Westphalia, through his understandably speedy rise to prominence and friendship with many equally eminent (German) composers, his successes with the Quartet, refusal to accede to Nazism in Germany, to his emigration to the United States and forging of a new musical life there".
"There are over 200 apposite illustrations in Adolf Busch: the Life of an Honest Musician. Chapters range in length from just a dozen pages on Busch's family to nearly a hundred on Bush's periods spent in Vienna and the USA. It really is hard to imagine any aspect of the life and work of Busch that's not covered in this study. Musical illustrations and extracts from scores are present when they add something. But the narrative can easily be read without intimate or advanced knowledge of music theory. Potter is expert at interpreting technicalities and explaining their significances to us. This adds immeasurably to the positive impact of the two volumes. They are substantial and authoritative, yet accessible to the non-specialist, and to those otherwise unfamiliar with Busch's work and world.
Potter's style at times tends slightly to the florid, the colorful. But this is not a serious drawback. His use of ample quotations, examples, illustrations and anecdotes makes the text substantial, solid, reliable and robust. If you are looking for the definitive repository of material on Adolf Busch and/or a near-exemplary biography of a great musician that combines restrained interpretation and explanation with factual discourse so well-conceived and written that it's likely to become a classic, then this will fit the bill without reservations. As a contribution to musical scholarship in an area central to the development of twentieth century performance too, Adolf Busch: the Life of an Honest Musician is sure to succeed and earn a place at the top of the list. Recommended without hesitation".
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