Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte
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Oh dear Felix....
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Last edited by Stanfordian; 10-08-17, 14:51.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI will when I get the chance. I was listening to the Emersons, not a quartet I have much time for in general but there was a Youtube of it with a score. Part of the reason I'm not keen on Mendelssohn is connected with part of the reason I'm not very keen on Brahms - the classicism that Vox Humana mentions: whatever "progressive" aspects there are in Brahms they occur almost exclusively within conventional forms, and that kind of tension between form and material doesn't interest me as much as the idea of new materials demanding and creating new forms. I don't really know what "expert opinion" has to say on Mendelssohn, I'm just responding to what I hear like everyone else.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostThat's an interesting way to view things, though I wonder if a form of post justification. I do like a lot of Brahms and some Mendelssohn, and even Tchaikovsky. I know there are people who try to explain their likes/dislikes in terms of forms/standards etc. but sometimes it's just instinctive surely.
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Originally posted by Stanfordian View PostI recall a musicologist (could have been H.C. Robbins Landon or R Larry Todd) saying that Mendelssohn could have been as young as 14 or 15 when he wrote the Octet. Certainly an amazing prodigy! I rarely play the Octet these days as I over-played it for several months and it is too common for my liking on recital programmes I attended.
I get great, great pleasure from the Italian Symphony, the Violin Concerto, the Piano Trios, and the Piano Concertos especially - and much to enjoy in many of his other Chamber and Orchestral works, too. But his solo keyboard Music and anything involving a voice/voices ... not for me, alas.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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If you love those famous early works like the Octet or the Dream Overture remember that by 1830, he’d also composed Symphonies 1 & 5, String Quartets Op.12 and 13, Quintet Op.18, Op.25 Piano Concerto…. and before them, he’d written a number of, effectively, “apprentice” works in chamber & orchestral genres to which he assigned no opus number; so while certainly very young, these mid-to-late-1820s pieces are the work of an experienced composer.
I love his music so much I’m always convinced that it’s only because many listeners don’t know, say, the A minor quintet or the stormy and songful 1st Symphony** well enough that they don’t love those too.(**1824! pre-Octet - early on when conducting it in London Mendelssohn replaced the original scherzo with that of the Octet itself, but restored the first one later. Both are included on the LSO/JEG album).
The Op.18 Quintet’s astonishing 1st movement has such has expansive proliferation of beautiful, memorable ideas, you begin to realise why Hans Keller thought so highly of it, as of the chamber music generally. Op. 12, 13 and 18 have a melodic inspiration, formally inventiveness and in the case of the quartets, concise intensity that should find them swiftly joining the Octet in your musical heart of hearts.
(With this emphasis on prodigious achievement, let's not forget the Violin Concerto, so inspired and innovative as it is, is positively middle-aged-to-late Mendelssohn, 1838-44... I wonder how it would strike us to hear it for the first time now! Pretty mind-blowing, I would think...)
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostIf you love those famous early works like the Octet or the Dream Overture remember that by 1830, he’d also composed Symphonies 1 & 5, String Quartets Op.12 and 13, Quintet Op.18, Op.25 Piano Concerto…. and before them, he’d written a number of, effectively, “apprentice” works in chamber & orchestral genres to which he assigned no opus number; so while certainly very young, these mid-to-late-1820s pieces are the work of an experienced composer.
I love his music so much I’m always convinced that it’s only because many listeners don’t know, say, the A minor quintet or the stormy and songful 1st Symphony** well enough that they don’t love those too.(**1824! pre-Octet - early on when conducting it in London Mendelssohn replaced the original scherzo with that of the Octet itself, but restored the first one later. Both are included on the LSO/JEG album).
The Op.18 Quintet’s astonishing 1st movement has such has expansive proliferation of beautiful, memorable ideas, you begin to realise why Hans Keller thought so highly of it, as of the chamber music generally. Op. 12, 13 and 18 have a melodic inspiration, formally inventiveness and in the case of the quartets, concise intensity that should find them swiftly joining the Octet in your musical heart of hearts.
(With this emphasis on prodigious achievement, let's not forget the Violin Concerto, so inspired and innovative as it is, is positively middle-aged-to-late Mendelssohn, 1838-44... I wonder how it would strike us to hear it for the first time now! Pretty mind-blowing, I would think...)
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostBut surely that in turn begs the question as to whether forms are any more or less "instinctive" than the means of articulation (speech, music etc) which frame them. The potential for articulation is mostly inborn, (mostly apart from in some brain damaged), but it has to have the framework, whether that's gramar, syntax or musical means, to be enabled. Those frameworks evolve culturally and historically alongside the evolving brain, wouldn't one say? - rendering any separation of "the instinctive" from the arena within which the human capacities express themselves undialectical (for want of a better word!)
My original point was to try to show that external "rules", which may be helpful for some people in some situations, do not have to always apply. Thus music may be classified in various categories (too simple, too structured, formless, too complex, repetitive, too short, cacophonous ...) hence some may claim that they only like well structured music - but might get completely caught out by a piece which they find they do like despite their prejudices.
For composers, having knowledge and appreciation of different forms would probably be very helpful, and enable them to create new works which are effective and appropriate. This might be particularly important for composers of theatre and film music, and knowledge and skill with different forms must make composing easier.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostIt always strikes me that Richard Strauss must have coped those repeated, rapid-fire woodwind chords at the start of the "Italian" when he composed "Don Juan" 50+ years later. Just thought I'd mention that.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Braunschlag View PostNah! I reckon he'd been listening to Waxmans Prince Valiant score, the missing Strauss symphonic poem.
(More Gold than Korn.)[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostThat's an interesting way to view things, though I wonder if a form of post justification. I do like a lot of Brahms and some Mendelssohn, and even Tchaikovsky. I know there are people who try to explain their likes/dislikes in terms of forms/standards etc. but sometimes it's just instinctive surely.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThe concept that a musical idea needs to find its own form, rather than fitting into a pre-existent one, that is to say that idea and form are two aspects of the same thing, is I think one of the most revolutionary and compelling features of Beethoven's work, and I do find myself being much more strongly attracted to those 19th century composers who took it on board (Berlioz, Wagner, Bruckner) than those who didn't (Mendelssohn, Brahms)....
Not one of his best sonnets, but I still think Wordsworth had something to say -
Nuns fret not at their convent’s narrow room;
And hermits are contented with their cells;
And students with their pensive citadels;
Maids at the wheel, the weaver at his loom,
Sit blithe and happy; bees that soar for bloom,
High as the highest Peak of Furness-fells,
Will murmur by the hour in foxglove bells:
In truth the prison, into which we doom
Ourselves, no prison is: and hence for me,
In sundry moods, ’twas pastime to be bound
Within the Sonnet’s scanty plot of ground;
Pleased if some Souls (for such there needs must be)
Who have felt the weight of too much liberty,
Should find brief solace there, as I have found.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Postjust an excuse for sloppiness, some wd say - avoiding the rigours of constraint and the fructifying discipline this produces.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post... (I don't think the literary work featuring your namesake would have got very far had it been subject to existing constraints on what a novel ought to be!)
Mind you, the 'novel' has always seemed able to embrace the woolliest and sloppiest approaches to form and structure - from the very start ( I think of the Quixote, of Robinson Crusoe, of Tristram Shandy).
But in music - I think I am most drawn by rigour and discipline rather than splurge - hence my (not too serious) expostulation...
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