What Makes a Great Composer?

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A01=Karol Jan Borowiecki
A01=Marc T. Law
Ability
Analysis
Artistic
Audiences
Author_Karol Jan Borowiecki
Author_Marc T. Law
Bach
Beethoven
Biographical
Borowiecki
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Careers
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Century
Classical
Competition
Composers
Composition
Conservatories
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Constraints
Creative
Creativity
Cultural
Data
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Development
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Employment
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Evidence
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forthcoming
Generations
Geographic
Greatness
Grove
Haydn
Human
Ideas
Incentives
Income
Influence
Innovation
Institutional
Liszt
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Mozart
Music
Musicians
Networks
Online
Opera
Opportunities
Originality
Output
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Periods
Piano
Productivity
Professional
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Psychological
Quality
Recognition
Relationship
Sample
Spotify
Student
Stylistic
Talent
Teachers
Wars

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691257112
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Nov 2026
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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How education, institutions, emotion, and opportunity shape creativity in classical music

Why do we still listen to Mozart’s music but not Salieri’s? Would Nadia Boulanger be better known as a composer than a teacher if she were a man? Why did so many composers move to Vienna, Paris, and London, despite the hardships of city life? In What Makes a Great Composer?, economists Karol J. Borowiecki and Marc T. Law offer a novel perspective on why some composers and their works have endured while others have not. Drawing on data-driven methods and economic theory rather than the usual anecdotes and received wisdom regarding the sources of musical genius, Borowiecki and Law uncover previously unnoticed patterns of creativity. Spanning nearly a millennium of musical history—following composers from medieval courts and cathedrals to modern concert halls and conservatories—their account shows how the creative lives of composers were molded by opportunity, constraint, talent, and temperament.

Borowiecki and Law consider not only celebrated masters but also forgotten voices, including female composers whose paths were blocked by structural barriers. They explore key determinants of success, including education, cities and migration, war and conflict, and economic incentives. Drawing on a wealth of data gathered over nearly twenty years, and using such metrics as expert rankings, the length of biographical entries, stylistic originality, influence on peers, and contemporary popularity, they uncover the forces that shaped composers’ creativity. By showing how composers lived, struggled, and sometimes transcended the worlds that formed them, Borowiecki and Law shed light not only on music history but also, more broadly, on the conditions that allow creativity to flourish.

Karol J. Borowiecki is professor of economics at the University of Southern Denmark and President of the Association for Cultural Economics International. He is the coauthor of The Economics of Art and Culture.
Marc T. Law is professor of economics at the University of Vermont and a member of the editorial board of the Journal of Cultural Economics.

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