What is it about Bol�穢ro, Gaspard de la nuit, and Daphnis et Chlo�穢 that makes musicians and listeners alike love them so? Stephen Zank here illuminates these and other works of Maurice Ravel
through several of the composer's fascinations: dynamic intensification, counterpoint, orchestration, exotic influences on Western music, and an interest in multi-sensorial perception.
Connecting all these fascinations, Zank argues, is irony. His book offers an appreciation of Ravel's musical irony that is grounded in the vocabularies and criticism of the time and in two
early attempts at writing up a "Ravel Aesthetic" by intimates of Ravel. Thomas Mann called irony the phenomenon that is, "beyond compare, the most profound and most alluring in the world."
Irony and Sound, written with insight and flair, provides a long-needed reconsideration of Ravel's modernity, his teaching, and his place in twentieth-century music and culture. Stephen Zank is
a visiting professor at the University of Rochester and the author of Maurice Ravel: A Guide to Research.