Originally posted by hercule
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How to fix Mahler's second
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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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Martin
Would Mr Grew perhaps like to take this one stage further and create a single ubiquitous Mahler symphony from the best bits of all the others? The People's Mahler, perhaps, available also in an eight-minute precis version for our dear Breakfast listeners.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostPerhaps we should set up an Our History forum, down in a netherworld where the oldsters can gather and swap memories and 'younger' members can come to listen, hanging in rapt admiration on every word? There doesn't quite seem to be a place for it in the main forum.
Ludo's Battle
The Exodus, and
The Resurrection
We need a Homer to write of these tales of the ancients, or a Prokofiev to write a cantata.
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Originally posted by Martin View PostWould Mr Grew perhaps like to take this one stage further and create a single ubiquitous Mahler symphony from the best bits of all the others? The People's Mahler, perhaps, available also in an eight-minute precis version for our dear Breakfast listeners.
Last edited by ahinton; 30-11-10, 05:07.
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Uncle Monty
I don't subscribe to all the guff about "the sanctity of the text", and I've never been above rewriting bits of music if I think it might make them sound better, but on the other hand Mahler 2 has been going on quite happily for well over a century, so even though I believe Mahler himself was known to play the movements in a different order, I wouldn't touch it now. It's OK :cool2:
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Originally posted by johnb View PostI blame it all on Beethoven.
Everything went downhill from when he decided to write the EU Anthem as a choral finale to his ninth symphony. Poor deluded, half crazed, deaf fool.Last edited by ahinton; 30-11-10, 05:09.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostWhen you or anyone else starts to blame Beethoven for giving Sydney a reason of his . . . own to make the kind of remark that opened this thread, there is sreuly [surely, surely] a bug [big, surely] problem . . .
"This is precisely why, in my opinion, Beethoven's Choral Symphony, after three magnificent movements, comes such a cropper at the end. Even Mahler who excelled as a song-writer (as Beethoven did, notably in An die ferne Geliebte) could not dovetail song into symphony without leaving scars and blotches which become evident to the least tutored listener, who is prepared to use his ears and remember what has gone before. Mahler's Eighth Symphony escapes this general condemnation because it is genuinely a choral symphony, not an instrumental work with a choral 'bit' tacked on for effect."
It cannot be denied that Mr. Sharp shows tremendous penetration there and every word is right!!
Dr. Williams's Sea Symphony is a considerably better effort than Mahler's Second we find, because the chorus, coming in with a big shout right at the start, is much more integrated into the symphonic form. In fact it is the best of all Williams's symphonies.
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