Originally posted by ahinton
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David Matthews SYMPHONY NO. 8 First Performance 17/04/15
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Roehre
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostIt's the bit in brackets that seems to me to be of the essence here; some others may simply not engage with this but perhaps some others again do not wish to do so as it seems to them not to accord to the world view to which they choose to subscribe...
There's cutting edge on the one hand - and cutting ice (or not) on the other...
To quote Matthews himself:
If composers still want to express such emotions [as "joy, gaiety, exuberance"] they might profitably consider how Tippett's language in its development from orthodox tonality to pantonality has always been a potent vehicle for the widest range of expression.
... but such "considerations" haven't entered Matthews' own work in the Eighth Symphony, which sounds like a repudiation of that very development that he rightly admires in Tippett's work. By denying the expressive power of Music beyond the Martinu/Rubbra type of vocabularies, by closing its ears even to the Tippett Third Symphony or the Concerto for Orchestra, Matthews betrays his own (earlier) aesthetic, and instead of "joy, gaiety, exuberance" he offers a rather moribund view of the Present and a pessimistic "world view" that offers nothing of hope or optimism.
There's cutting edge on one hand - and cutting a sorry figure on the other.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Roehre View Postwhich is exactly the discussion we strongly had in the 1950s and '60s around the "Symphony", its form(s), its relevance (within and outside the musical world) and the related world views, isn't it?
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostFor me, it's not "the bit in brackets" that sums up the discussion on this Thread - rather, I focus on JLW's "makes it new": what exactly is it in this Eighth Symphony (which I repeat, I rather enjoyed) - or DM's other work - that is "new"? The world view to which I choose to subscribe doesn't really get excited by substituting a Scherzo by a Foxtrot.
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostTo quote Matthews himself:
If composers still want to express such emotions [as "joy, gaiety, exuberance"] they might profitably consider how Tippett's language in its development from orthodox tonality to pantonality has always been a potent vehicle for the widest range of expression.
... but such "considerations" haven't entered Matthews' own work in the Eighth Symphony, which sounds like a repudiation of that very development that he rightly admires in Tippett's work. By denying the expressive power of Music beyond the Martinu/Rubbra type of vocabularies, by closing its ears even to the Tippett Third Symphony or the Concerto for Orchestra, Matthews betrays his own (earlier) aesthetic, and instead of "joy, gaiety, exuberance" he offers a rather moribund view of the Present and a pessimistic "world view" that offers nothing of hope or optimism.
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostThere's cutting edge on one hand - and cutting a sorry figure on the other.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Postclosing its ears even to the Tippett Third Symphony
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostNow that is a composition which attempts to engage with symphonic tradition in other than a subservient way. Your point about optimism is also highly relevant here I think. When I said earlier that this kind of music "irritates the hell out of me" what I should more precisely have ascribed this feeling to was something like your "moribund view of the Present and a pessimistic "world view" that offers nothing of hope or optimism".
But anyway, some of this has to do with the whole "symphony" business; without in any sense wishing to undermine the questions posed by Jayne, suppose that David Matthews had instead entitled his piece Three Pieces for Orchestra (albeit a title that's just SO last century!)? What then?
OK, let's try this.
Did DM write a piece of cutting edge "forward looking" musical modernism that is an instantly an universally recognisable response to his and our own time? No. Did he set out to do this but somehow failed? No. Is there such a thing as an univerally recognissable response to out time in a piece of music? Doubtful - uncertain, anyway. Had it been a more obviously engaging response to the best of Tippett, would some of its more vociferous detractors have favoured it any more than they do now? Again, doubtful. Had he instead written that piece of "cutting edge "forward looking" musical modernism", might some of those detractors begin to suspect a modicum of creative dishonesty on his part? NOt for me to answer...Last edited by ahinton; 26-04-15, 17:30.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostFor me, it's not "the bit in brackets" that sums up the discussion on this Thread - rather, I focus on JLW's "makes it new": what exactly is it in this Eighth Symphony (which I repeat, I rather enjoyed) - or DM's other work - that is "new"? The world view to which I choose to subscribe doesn't really get excited by substituting a Scherzo by a Foxtrot.
To quote Matthews himself:
If composers still want to express such emotions [as "joy, gaiety, exuberance"] they might profitably consider how Tippett's language in its development from orthodox tonality to pantonality has always been a potent vehicle for the widest range of expression.
... but such "considerations" haven't entered Matthews' own work in the Eighth Symphony, which sounds like a repudiation of that very development that he rightly admires in Tippett's work. By denying the expressive power of Music beyond the Martinu/Rubbra type of vocabularies, by closing its ears even to the Tippett Third Symphony or the Concerto for Orchestra, Matthews betrays his own (earlier) aesthetic, and instead of "joy, gaiety, exuberance" he offers a rather moribund view of the Present and a pessimistic "world view" that offers nothing of hope or optimism.
There's cutting edge on one hand - and cutting a sorry figure on the other.
Does it repudiate or "betray" the concerto-for-orchestral, abstractly sonorous extremities of the 2nd, or the fiery neoclassical brilliance of the 5th, or make the 4th's ending pointlessly open-ended? Surely not...for me and my listening experiences, all of these thrillingly "make it new". Why should I keep going back to them otherwise?
(Thrilling again to the 1st Symphony & 1st Violin Concerto this morning, I do wonder how much open-eared listening has been going on with contributors here, beyond the 8th itself...which seems far too new in a literal sense to pass dismissive, isolated judgement upon.)
How hard it is to get one's (music-loving!) point across... let's take another angle: suppose Matthews' 9th was a dark, brooding piece, imagine a "pantonal" single movement with a huge discordant central climax, feeling like a vastly extended Egdon Heath...
...suppose, in a few years time, the 8th came to have "In Memoriam Normal Worrall" attached to it...(the central adagio was inspired by his death)...
My point in the original review about painting sunsets after a long, wide-ranging journey...but that he'd be unlikely to do the same again...Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 26-04-15, 18:37.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostBut anyway, some of this has to do with the whole "symphony" business; without in any sense wishing to undermine the questions posed by Jayne, suppose that David Matthews had instead entitled his piece Three Pieces for Orchestra (albeit a title that's just SO last century!)? What then?
OK, let's try this.
Did DM write a piece of cutting edge "forward looking" musical modernism that is an instantly an universally recognisable response to his and our own time? No. Did he set out to do this but somehow failed? No. Is there such a thing as an univerally recognissable response to out time in a piece of music? Doubtful - uncertain, anyway. Had it been a more obviously engaging response to the best of Tippett, would some of its more vociferous detractors have favoured it any more than they do now? Again, doubtful. Had he instead written that piece of "cutting edge "forward looking" musical modernism", might some of those detractors begin to suspect a modicum of creative dishonesty on his part? NOt for me to answer...
Tippett wrote his Third Symphony in reaction to a performance of Boulez' pli selon pli - he disliked the sounds he was listening to, but recognized what Boulez was doing and this sparked off his own new ways of thinking in his own Music. That is positive reaction.
Or, to return to a path I know we both enjoy walking down, Anthony Payne's Time's Arrow. Music by somebody who has heard and responded enthusiastically to Berio and Birtwistle, and has incorporated this enthusiasm into his own (more "traditionalist") soundworld - and produced a valid and highly impressive work that could not have been written by anyone else nor at any other time.
BY contrast, the Matthews Eighth seems to be taking the whole of Music since 1960 and pretending that it hasn't happened. Boulez? No. Carter? No. Scelsi? No. Berio? No. Birtwistle? No. Tippett? No. Coltrane, the Beatles, New Complexity, Gruber, Part, Reich, Feldman, Lutyens, Lutoslawski, Lachenmann, Cardew, Payne, Saariaho .... Nono. Nothing at all in any of it for him? That I find incredibly sad - that so much diverse creativity around him and he feels alienated from all of it, unable to produce something in response to the world in which he lives that sounds like ... well, Matthews; because if you and JLW are correct in asserting that the Eighth Symphony is one of his weaker works, then he's even saying No to himself![FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostMy point in the original review about painting sunsets after a long, wide-ranging journey...but that he'd be unlikely to do the same again...
Seeing that you have introduced paintings, I'll mention Hockney. By no means a "conceptual" Artist, he's a self-proclaimed "representational"Artist - but he doesn't ape conservative styles of sixty years ago. Instead, he moves with each decade to renew and refreshen his work, relishing the opportunities offered to him from each development in technology - the exuberance that Matthews seemed to require from composers leaps from Hockney's work and writings. Hockney shows that traditionalist ways of communication can still afford the imaginative Artist new means of expressive content. Matthews doesn't.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostThere's another thing we might try:
Tippett wrote his Third Symphony in reaction to a performance of Boulez' pli selon pli - he disliked the sounds he was listening to, but recognized what Boulez was doing and this sparked off his own new ways of thinking in his own Music. That is positive reaction.
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostOr, to return to a path I know we both enjoy walking down, Anthony Payne's Time's Arrow. Music by somebody who has heard and responded enthusiastically to Berio and Birtwistle, and has incorporated this enthusiasm into his own (more "traditionalist") soundworld - and produced a valid and highly impressive work that could not have been written by anyone else nor at any other time.
BY contrast, the Matthews Eighth seems to be taking the whole of Music since 1960 and pretending that it hasn't happened. Boulez? No. Carter? No. Scelsi? No. Berio? No. Birtwistle? No. Tippett? No. Coltrane, the Beatles, New Complexity, Gruber, Part, Reich, Feldman, Lutyens, Lutoslawski, Lachenmann, Cardew, Payne, Saariaho .... Nono. Nothing at all in any of it for him? That I find incredibly sad - that so much diverse creativity around him and he feels alienated from all of it, unable to produce something in response to the world in which he lives that sounds like ... well, Matthews; because if you and JLW are correct in asserting that the Eighth Symphony is one of his weaker works, then he's even saying No to himself!
Ah, well...(!)...
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostMatthews 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!.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View Postasking all this of ONE symphony
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