Originally posted by Richard Barrett
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Tippett's 1st Symphony
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Originally posted by Daniel View Post'too direct and too oblique'
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostBut I think obliqueness can occur in music without explicit outside references, for example in the relationships between its elements.
Interesting comparison perhaps in obliqueness between music and text, and music and image, which is exploited almost to the point of cliche in film sometimes (quiet song played over scene of intense horror etc), but has the ability to make powerful emotional point. I wonder if this kind of contrast was what Tippett was thinking of with his 'I drank in sorrow with her milk' etc?
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Originally posted by Daniel View PostI'd have thought a 'too' oblique musical idea would just sound like new idea.
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Very interesting, Richard, and the Schubert example casts what you're saying in a much clearer light, as far as I'm concerned. The chemistry inherent in the reaction between different ideas seems as bottomless as the human brain, it's just that some composers choices seem to spark off more of a response in one's own subconscious than others.
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