Apologies - reading that now it sounds a lot "bossier" and smart-butt-attempting than it left my keyboard. I would be genuinely interested to hear what might be specifically "Edwardian" features of this, or any, Music - but whilst I can hear the fragmentary, momentarily sunny, wistful mood alternates with descending minor key phrases — hope & uncertainty mingling, and the the shadowy passage after fig.24 in the 1st movement — chromatically shifting harmonies undermining the spirit of delight, or the drifting irresolution in the places you identify, I hear these types of passages in many works of Elgar's continental contemporaries (not just Mahler and Strauss, but Suk and Schönberg, too).
I first heard Elgar's Second Symphony when I was 15 - at a Live concert given by the Hallé under James Loughran. I hated it - it was noisy, and meandered on and on for far too long. Five years later, I was given the Solti recording: literally love at first hearing, and at every subsequent hearing, too - and from many different conductors. Edwardian sensibilities didn't feature in my dislike or adoration.
I first heard Elgar's Second Symphony when I was 15 - at a Live concert given by the Hallé under James Loughran. I hated it - it was noisy, and meandered on and on for far too long. Five years later, I was given the Solti recording: literally love at first hearing, and at every subsequent hearing, too - and from many different conductors. Edwardian sensibilities didn't feature in my dislike or adoration.
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