cover image Rough Ideas: Reflections on Music and More

Rough Ideas: Reflections on Music and More

Stephen Hough. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, $30 (460p) ISBN 978-0-374-25254-0

A classical musician holds forth on music, ethics, religion, and much else in this hit-and-miss grab bag of opinionating. Hough offers dozens of short essays on a multitude of topics; most concern his musical career and include appreciations of composers such as Liszt and Tchaikovsky, sketches of colleagues, recollections of concert mishaps (including a study of “humiliation and vomiting at the keyboard”), disquisitions on proper piano posture, and speculation on what constitutes a gay pianist (“Vladimir Horowitz once said there are three types of pianists: Jewish, gay and bad”). Hough’s interest then dilates widely as he touches on overly aggressive art restorations, the architecture of the Sydney Opera House, the morality of assisted suicide, the existence of God, and the sacrament of Communion (he’s a convert to Catholicism). Hough’s writings on music are endlessly knowledgeable, illuminating, and accessible, but his thoughts on nonmusical subjects are more diffuse and less engaging. (“The Big Bang, the first First, might well have been, above all, an explosion of love: the universe’s orgasm,” he conjectures at the end of a ramble on “encouragement, falsehood, and Auschwitz.”) Still, music lovers, from professional musicians to casual listeners, will find the book a delight to browse through. (Feb.)