Elgar: the 2nd Symphony
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Originally posted by Northender View Post0850: Thinking about it: Elgar's 2nd is (as Delboy would say) my most favourite symphony.
0852: Thinking some more: No, Sibelius's 5th.
0854: Vaughan Williams's 6th
0856: Mozart's 39th
0858: Sorry - I've changed ny mind (again): Shostakovitch's 5th
0900: Brahms's 2nd
0902: Sorry - another rethink - Mahler's 6th
0904: Final answer: Nielsen's 3rd
0906: (Sorry, just phoned a friend to confirm what I suspected all along): Elgar's 1st
0915: No..it was always Elgar's 2nd. How could I have ever thought oherwise?
0916: Hang on a mo....
EDIT
0922: Of course - how could I have overlooked Walton's 1st...
Tchaik 4
Rachmaninov 2
Wot no Beethoven
Mahler 2
Bruckner 7
I guess you used to be undecided but now you're not so sure!
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amateur51
Originally posted by Northender View Post0850: Thinking about it: Elgar's 2nd is (as Delboy would say) my most favourite symphony.
0852: Thinking some more: No, Sibelius's 5th.
0854: Vaughan Williams's 6th
0856: Mozart's 39th
0858: Sorry - I've changed ny mind (again): Shostakovitch's 5th
0900: Brahms's 2nd
0902: Sorry - another rethink - Mahler's 6th
0904: Final answer: Nielsen's 3rd
0906: (Sorry, just phoned a friend to confirm what I suspected all along): Elgar's 1st
0915: No..it was always Elgar's 2nd. How could I have ever thought oherwise?
0916: Hang on a mo....
EDIT
0922: Of course - how could I have overlooked Walton's 1st...
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amateur51
I know this is a personal idiosyncrasy but while they are both undoubtedly English I always regard Elgar & RVW as being influenced by Wales too
Walton does not strike me like that - he Anglo-Italian
What a loss to musicology I am
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostI know this is a personal idiosyncrasy but while they are both undoubtedly English I always regard Elgar & RVW as being influenced by Wales too
Walton does not strike me like that - he Anglo-Italian
What a loss to musicology I am
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Originally posted by Northender View Post0850: Thinking about it: Elgar's 2nd is (as Delboy would say) my most favourite symphony.
0852: Thinking some more: No, Sibelius's 5th.
0854: Vaughan Williams's 6th
0856: Mozart's 39th
0858: Sorry - I've changed ny mind (again): Shostakovitch's 5th
0900: Brahms's 2nd
0902: Sorry - another rethink - Mahler's 6th
0904: Final answer: Nielsen's 3rd
0906: (Sorry, just phoned a friend to confirm what I suspected all along): Elgar's 1st
0915: No..it was always Elgar's 2nd. How could I have ever thought oherwise?
0916: Hang on a mo....
EDIT
0922: Of course - how could I have overlooked Walton's 1st...
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Roehre
Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostIs it really true that Sibelius 4 or Mahler 9 "look to the future" in any meaningful way, other than that they can provide obvious links to later 20th Century music? But that's only obvious to us because we can view them historically.
But that doen't mean it isn't a work of genius.
Neither Elgar symphony can really be seen as belonging to a school, or beginning or continuing a movement ...; by your criterion of looking to the future, they are therefore of the past.
'End-of-an-era' even, since we know what came later. But what is the relevance of that? Is it a negative quality
.... Elgar's great works belong comfortably in a similar sound-world with Strauss, Mahler, Suk, early Schoenberg, early Bartok and others, but they are no more like them than they are like each other. Elgar was a one-off, who doesn't easily fit in anywhere - which has rather contributed to his being musical Marmite.
But within this generation of composers there are more and less forward looking works - that's not a negative epithet.
Who would "condemn" Strauss 4 Letzte Lieder for being nostalgic and backwards looking music? But compared to Boulez' exactly contemporary 2nd piano sonata or Le soleil des eaux it is most certainly a work of the past.
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Hornspieler
Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostGlad we can agree. Good post.
As far as Elgar's "3rd symphony" is concerned, he didn't write one - and I'm content to leave it at that.
HS
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Northender
Originally posted by cloughie View PostI can't understand how you've not even thought of
Tchaik 4
Rachmaninov 2
Wot no Beethoven
Mahler 2
Bruckner 7
I guess you used to be undecided but now you're not so sure!
Did I mention the Sibelius 5th and the Roy Harris 3rd, by the way?
To be serious: the Elgar 2nd was the first symphony I discovered for myself (as against being introduced to it). I was blown away, as they say, especially by the 2nd movement, and have loved it ever since. I have recordings conducted by Hanley, Barbirolli, Haitink, Elgar and Previn. My other musical discovery at that time was the Sibelius 2nd, closely followed by his 5th.
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