Originally posted by Pulcinella
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David Matthews SYMPHONY NO. 8 First Performance 17/04/15
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostOne knows that, and appreciates why, Richard is no fan of the RAH's acoustic properties, but I reckon his CONSTRUCTION would make a very fine Prom indeed. With the right, ahem, marketing, it could attract a large in-hall audience, too.
Nine Rivers would "fit", too. But, in the immediate wake of Roger "What do you mean, 'No cutting edge Music'? We've got some Birtwistle" Wright's programming talents, no chance![FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostA very respectable piece, I thought - the most immediately attractive work (IMO) from this composer, written in a Musical language not far removed from, say, Rubbra or Martinu - with flavours from the post-RVW pastoralists and Mahler #10 at various points. Well worth hearing.Originally posted by Boilk View PostI once heard it said that Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy was Tchiakovsky's most attrative work – so the acccolade is double-edged. Rubbra was doing his thing from the 40s to the 70s. As direct and digestible as DM's music often is, I don't think history will be kind to someone doing this sort of thing in the early 21st century.
A marvellous piece.
So what if it doesn't break new ground.
So what if it follows the RVW-Rubbra line (Leighton and Rawsthorne were brought to my mind at times too).
My kind of Symphony this,what super dance suite like finale.
Didn't care too much for the rest of the programme
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Originally posted by Boilk View PostI once heard it said that Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy was Tchiakovsky's most attrative work – so the acccolade is double-edged.
Rubbra was doing his thing from the 40s to the 70s. As direct and digestible as DM's music often is, I don't think history will be kind to someone doing this sort of thing in the early 21st century.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostIt's kind of you to say so but please not in the RAH. The Round House would be the place in London I think.
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostNow I'm no fan of David Matthews' work either. I appreciate that music doesn't need to "break new ground", though if I'm honest I do prefer when it does, and I also appreciate that Matthews doesn't write the music he does in order to court "accessibility", but what I don't like is music that appears to be in a state of denial about the second half of the twentieth century ... , I'm sure that will be thought unfair but that's how I hear it.
Take Ferneyhough and Matthews, for example, born in the same country within less than two months of one another yet their musics could hardly be more different. As far as I know, their paths crossed only once, when each was in his late 'teens at what would then have been a rare Prom (I think) performance of Rachmaninov's first symphony, which evidently impressed them both. Finnissy and Colin Matthews were likewise born in the same country barely more than a month apart, yet look again at how different their musics are.
Howells has been mentioned upthread (or perhaps in another thread); I well recall the late Derek Bell telling me that, when he studied with him, Howells was always going on to him about Boulez, Stockhausen and other Darmstadt oriented composers, which I have to say surprised me rather and Bell found this heavy going.
"In denial" suggests in practice either an ignorance or a wilful rejection, but do people who don't care for David Matthews' music really do so because they believe him to be ignorant of or wilfully to reject the work of, say, Stockhausen, Nono, Boulez or whoever? Were that to be the case and were it to be correct (which it most certainly isn't), one could only conclude that Matthews (and others) write as they do either as though such composers didn't exist or as some kind of reaction againt them and their work, which would be an unacceptable way for a composer to work. Matthews writes as he does because that's the way he feels that he wants to write; to do otherwise would be an act of creative dishonesty, much as it would be were you to compose tonal symphonies against your will or better judgement, if I may say so. Being aware (i.e. not in denial) of other musics isn't the same as identifying with them.
I'll say nothing about Matthews' 8th symphony yet because I want to listen to it again at least once before doing so ...Last edited by french frank; 20-04-15, 09:20.
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DAVID MATTHEWS SYMPHONY NO.8. LIVE HDs RELAY, BBCPO/GRUBER 17/04/15.
Matthews reaches a peak in his symphonic output through nos. 4 to 6; from the chamber-musical 4th, with its Machaut-inspired polyphonic opening and a tango for a scherzo, then the sheer brilliance of the 5th's cut-and-thrust which starts out as neo-classical then goes far beyond into dreamlike evocations (cf. Schnittke Concerto Grosso No.4/ Symphony No.5); to the towering confrontational expressionism of No.6 - it's quite an impressive sequence!
The 7th returned to the earlier one-movement-with-subdivision structures of 1 and 3; almost monothematic, it seemed both a culmination and a backwards look. Simpler, fresher, more optimistic. A happy note to end the cycle on...
But here we are with an 8th. An afterglow, perhaps?
After an emotionally ambiguous slow introduction comes a leaping, vaulting, almost Straussian theme in a seemingly conventional Romantic mood of aspiration - a quest in search of a climax. But the focus seems unsure, and after about 5' the energies dwindle on a drumroll, followed by a mysterious and reflective slow section about 4' long, recalling the mood of the opening and perhaps preparing the ground for the central slow movement.
This is an intense adagio, a string-dominated elegy for a lost friend, and it really does seem the heart of No.8, based on two themes of remarkable beauty. You almost feel the symphony was written to find a home, or a frame, for it. But the emotion is carefully shaped here: after a little over 4' a fugal section begins on a second theme, leading to an anguished climax where both melodies are combined, then a dark, bleak coda. This extraordinarily eloquent piece is one of Matthews' finest creations, even in an output rich in slow movements (both separate and within larger structures).
Nor should the seemingly carefree finale be taken as shallow or irresponsible; for now, the waves of grief have come to shore, and these 4 dances are for the most part gentle, delicate and atmospheric. The last is woven from characteristic materials - shimmering instrumentation, a pastoral oboe, distant trumpets... then thematic fragments of the first dance, drifting and fading towards a nocturnal close (like Mahler in the scherzos of his 7th and 9th symphonies, but here warm and glowing rather than nightmarish) - a close which is surprisingly brusque, even a little throwaway - a single quiet chord, like the shutting of a distant door.
There are many precedents for dancing, carefree-seeming finales: works as different as Honegger 4 or Shostakovich 6 come to mind. This one seems perfectly judged: a deft and subtle balm after the intensity of the slow movement.
This composer rarely repeats himself. The 8th is very different from its sharply-focussed predecessor, as from the earlier separate-movement symphonies Nos. 4 and 5 (my personal favourites). I still have a few doubts about the musical focus (or lack of it) of the first movement. But the performance may have been partly to blame: the BBC Phil will surely project it with greater confidence and physical boldness in the later performances it deserves. True perhaps of the finale too, but - they commissioned it and played it!
So a symphonic afterglow perhaps, perhaps rather more. But if, after a symphonic cycle of endless variety of moods, forms, and musical inventiveness, Matthews wants to paint a few sunsets, why shouldn't he?
But really, you feel he's unlikely to do the same again...
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostEloquently expressed as ever, Jayne - thank you very much for your always insightful and sensitive commetns!
I urge all the devoted listeners here to go back and read it.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostMon Dieu!
David Matthews, anyone?...It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostAnd thank you, Alistair, for the wonderful breadth and depth of your #37, which said so much - of real importance - that I was trying to figure out a way of saying (and which shouldn't be lost amid inessentials).
I urge all the devoted listeners here to go back and read it.
I have listened now 3 times and this work is fast becoming a favourite of mine.
Only managed to get the thing out of my head this evening by listening to Manfred
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by french frank View Postin the hope that people will respect the topic.
(* part but in fact not all of my post appears quoted by ahinton, with an ellipsis where something I guess I'm not allowed to say used to be)Last edited by Guest; 20-04-15, 13:49.
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