Originally posted by kernelbogey
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Schoenberg's A Survivor from Warsaw
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostI was attempting to answer smittims' post, but anyway... if you "just didn't like the music" how is that William Glock's fault?
What I think I was expressing poorly in my #12 was that some aspects of music choices on the Third Programme led me to reject a lot of twentieth-century music and thus deprive myself of learning about it. Unfair to blame the BBc for that, of course, since it was my choice.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostI'm very sorry, I didn't mean to be as confrontational as I no doubt sounded!
Ridiculous in hindsight, as you don't really need to follow the structure of a symphony's sonata-form first movement to enjoy it, any more than having to work out that of a JSB fugue.
My early exposures in the sixth form were with the Head of Physics (which might account a little for the analytical approach/suggestion), though to be fair we were encouraged simply to listen, with a few of us crowded around a pocket score. I certainly remember listening to Berg's Lyric Suite that way.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostMy early exposures in the sixth form were with the Head of Physics (which might account a little for the analytical approach/suggestion), though to be fair we were encouraged simply to listen, with a few of us crowded around a pocket score. I certainly remember listening to Berg's Lyric Suite that way.
It's been a very interesting discussion: would very much like to take part in a performance of 'A Survivor from Warsaw'. My appreciation of Schoenberg, Berg, Webern (among other composers of a roughly similar time period) is very patchy. However, that says more about me than about their music.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostThere was some argument I recall that Glock's tenure at the Proms was marked by this . Not sure what the evidence if for it though but again well before my time .
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I treasure a delightful book by Leo Black: 'The Glock era and after', which refutes most of the 'urban myths' about his tenure. I was just thinking that I wouldn't take up R3 time with George Lloyd , though I would find time for Rubbra. Just as I'd be a rotten magistrate or juror, I'd probably be a rotten Controller Radio3. Which of us can claim to be truly impartial? A recent CR3 allegedly just didn't like Havergal Brian, with predictable results.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostI treasure a delightful book by Leo Black: 'The Glock era and after', which refutes most of the 'urban myths' about his tenure. I was just thinking that I wouldn't take up R3 time with George Lloyd , though I would find time for Rubbra. Just as I'd be a rotten magistrate or juror, I'd probably be a rotten Controller Radio3. Which of us can claim to be truly impartial? A recent CR3 allegedly just didn't like Havergal Brian, with predictable results."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostI wouldn't have expected a R3 Controller to get so involved in such mundane matters as which composers music to ban on the principle that 'if I don't like it then it then no-one else can listen to it either' so such things would be delegated downwards to others. That way impartiality is maintained.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostGlock's legacy has, I fear, been long clouded by disproportionate and misleading assumptions... Rubbra didn't far too well either
Very good article on this: Concerts for Coteries, or Music for All? Glock's Proms Reconsidered
David Wright (not related to Roger, as far I know)
The Musical Times
Vol. 149, No. 1904 (Autumn, 2008), pp. 3-34
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I wonder if some of the past mistaken assumptions about Glock arise from the fact that he had a foreign sounding name and was a a conspicuous public intellectual . He was also, an outstanding educationalist - I think he played a key role in starting the Dartington summer school . He was also a very good pianist specialising IIRC in Haydn piano trios - a commendable habit. What would the chances of some one like that being a BBC controller now ? I can answer the question - zero.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostI treasure a delightful book by Leo Black: 'The Glock era and after', which refutes most of the 'urban myths' about his tenure. I was just thinking that I wouldn't take up R3 time with George Lloyd , though I would find time for Rubbra. Just as I'd be a rotten magistrate or juror, I'd probably be a rotten Controller Radio3. Which of us can claim to be truly impartial? A recent CR3 allegedly just didn't like Havergal Brian, with predictable results.
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Yes, I remember it well. The controller I was referring to (who allegedly 'didn't like' Brian) was in the early 'noughties. There were quite a few Brian premieres in the Glock era, as I recall, including the splendid Seventh under Harry Newstone. That, and the Boult 'Gothic' were my introduction to Brian's music. Of course , Bob Simpson was the prime mover of the Brian revival.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostI wonder if some of the past mistaken assumptions about Glock arise from the fact that he had a foreign sounding name and was a a conspicuous public intellectual . He was also, an outstanding educationalist - I think he played a key role in starting the Dartington summer school . He was also a very good pianist specialising IIRC in Haydn piano trios - a commendable habit. What would the chances of some one like that being a BBC controller now ? I can answer the question - zero.
Also, whenever the name of Glock is mentioned it isn't long before that of George Lloyd follows. Let's be clear: no composer's "success" or "failure" in terms of performances, attention, BBC broadcasts etc., is ever the result of support or antipathy from a single individual, no matter how high their position in the musical world. And then there's often an imputation that the reason Lloyd's music has been neglected is that his music has "proper tunes" etc. etc. - well, large amounts of his orchestral music have been released on CD, much more than of many composers one might think of as being equally or more "deserving".
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostQuite.
Also, whenever the name of Glock is mentioned it isn't long before that of George Lloyd follows. Let's be clear: no composer's "success" or "failure" in terms of performances, attention, BBC broadcasts etc., is ever the result of support or antipathy from a single individual, no matter how high their position in the musical world. And then there's often an imputation that the reason Lloyd's music has been neglected is that his music has "proper tunes" etc. etc. - well, large amounts of his orchestral music have been released on CD, much more than of many composers one might think of as being equally or more "deserving".
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