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David Cairns

    David Cairns is a British journalist, non-fiction writer, and musician, recognized as a leading authority on the life of Hector Berlioz. His journalistic career has graced numerous high-profile newspapers and magazines, including serving as chief music critic for The Sunday Times and Music Critic and Arts Editor for The Spectator. Cairns's work delves deeply into the composer's life and oeuvre, offering readers profound insights into Berlioz's world. Through his meticulous research and engaging prose, he illuminates the complexities and brilliance of this significant musical figure.

    Mobility, Education and Employability in the European Union
    Mozart and His Operas
    Berlioz: The making of an artist 1803-1832
    • Berlioz: The making of an artist 1803-1832

      • 640 pages
      • 23 hours of reading

      No artist's achievement connects more directly with early experience than that of Berlioz. David Cairns draws on a wealth of family papers to recreate in authentic and intimate detail the provincial milieu of Berlioz's boyhood, showing how the son of a village doctor was already transforming himself into the composer of the Fantastic Symphony. Berlioz's desperate attempts to win his father's approval for his vocation, his struggles to establish himself on the Parisian musical scene, and his passionate pursuit of love are all brought vividly to life in this first volume of David Cairns's award-winning biography.

      Berlioz: The making of an artist 1803-1832
      5.0
    • Mozart and His Operas

      • 304 pages
      • 11 hours of reading

      Mozart's unusual childhood as a musical prodigy touring Europe as a performer from an early age is well known. This book presents a narrative that puts Mozart's operas in the context of his life, showing how they illuminate his creativity as a whole.

      Mozart and His Operas
      4.2
    • Mobility, Education and Employability in the European Union

      Inside Erasmus

      • 192 pages
      • 7 hours of reading

      This book takes an in-depth look at the European Commission’s Erasmus programme. In its current Erasmus+ format, the programme supports international exchange visits among students, trainees, volunteers and academic members of staff with a view to enhancing employability and encouraging intercultural understanding. Against the backdrop of the 30th anniversary of Erasmus, the authors explore the successes of the programme, most prominently the undergraduate exchange programme, as well as areas of on-going development, including the incorporation of short duration mobility projects focused on specific social issues into the initiative. Through integrating perspectives from authors in a number of European countries, all of whom have knowledge regarding various aspects of Erasmus, the book provides insight into the challenges facing the programme as it moves into its fourth decade. Mobility, Education and Employability in the European Union: Inside Erasmus will be of interest to students and scholars from a range of disciplines, including geography, sociology and European politics.

      Mobility, Education and Employability in the European Union