Spectator mourns opera critic

Spectator mourns opera critic

RIP

norman lebrecht

April 04, 2024

The Cambridge scholar Michael Tanner has died at the age of 89. He began reviewing opera for the Spectator in 1966.

Tanner was a lecturer in philosophy and a life fellow of Corpus Christie College. His books include short guides to Nietzsche and Wagner.

Obituary here.

Comments

  • Player says:

    RIP. A great if complex man!

  • Simone says:

    One of the last critics worth reading for his integrity, literary style, opinions and knowledgeable insights. RIP.

  • Daniel Reiss says:

    Michael Tanner’s little book on Wagner is a treasure, wise and fun.

  • George Mc says:

    I first encountered Michael as a wonderfully forceful critic in the Classic CD magazine where he regularly upset the readers with rejections of sacred cows like Solti and the “authenticity” merchants. His books and essays on Nietzsche were also refreshingly unpretentious unlike later efforts from such imposters as Brian Leiter.

  • Jobim75 says:

    Didn’t know him which I regret because will have less and less of his kind…rip

  • John Deathridge says:

    Michael Tanner was a very special, precious person. His death is a truly sad loss to opera criticism and the world of philosophy. When I saw him not so long ago in Cambridge in his house with its vast library of books and recordings, he pointed to something in its midst which the Emperor of Brazil, Pedro II, had presented to Wagner at the first Bayreuth Festival in 1876: a very fine cigar, lovingly encased in a prominent position to prevent it from decay. God knows where Michael got it. A terrific joke of course. He had few illusions about the precariousness of art and philosophy in today’s world, but never lost his good humour and enthusiasm. I’ll really miss him.

  • John Rawnsley says:

    One must not speak ill of the dead …….

  • John Rawnsley says:

    But on behalf of my wife, I am unable to forgive him …..

  • Christopher Morley says:

    I used to admire him, but then he went and deployed the word “chthonic” in a review of a new CD of Mahler 3. And they used to get at me for using obscure words! This was as bad as using music textbook jargon, making the reader feel inadequate.

  • John Borstlap says:

    Tanner was a rarity: a great critic and musicologist. His work on Wagner will remain as valuable as ever.

  • MOST READ TODAY: