Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte
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Tabakova String Paths
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amateur51
Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostMartin Anderson is evidently a big fan he reviewed the disc in IRR .
But I'm pleased that you are so taken with it Barbs and I thank you for bringing it so enthusiastically to my attention
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Each to their own ams - the slow movement of the Cello Concerto is particularly fine IMO as well as Such Different Paths which is apparently inspired by the Lark Ascending no less - an unusual influence for a modern composer .
There is rather too much minimalist doodling as it is described in some of those earlier YT pieces .
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostMartin Anderson is evidently a big fan he reviewed the disc in IRR .[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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There's another CD with oboe music - http://musicweb-international.com/cl...ver_cc2021.htm
I listened to Frozen River Flows, though I was perhaps rather more taken with Howard Skempton's "Random Girl".
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amateur51
Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostI have come back to this CD after three weeks or so away from it and it is making just as big an impression on me as before . A real discovery and the Cello Concerto continues to hold me in its thrall in particular.
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostGiven your enthusiastic advocacy, Barbs I've been waiting for it to emerge on Spotify/Naxos library but so far to no avail.I shall persist
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Ruhevoll
I wanted to like this based on the IRR review and enthusiasm here. But it all seemed like so much sub-Arvo Part/Max Richter wallpaper music. Harmless, nice, but going nowhere and doing nothing. If this is the 21st Century's idea of consolation, how far we've strayed from the path offered by Taverner, Tallis et al!
Where are our Bachs, Beethovens, Bruckners and Mahlers? Tonal music doesn't have to be dull. Surely there is a future for serious modern classical music, or did the film score and electronic revolution kill it off for good?
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Originally posted by Ruhevoll View PostWhere are our Bachs, Beethovens, Bruckners and Mahlers? Tonal music doesn't have to be dull. Surely there is a future for serious modern classical music, or did the film score and electronic revolution kill it off for good?
"Where are our Bachs, Beethovens, Bruckners and Mahlers?" is like asking "Where are the 19th Century's Barretts, Birtwistles, Lachenmanns, and Ferneyhoughs?" or"Where are the 15th Century's Bachs, Beethovens, Bruckners and Mahlers?" Each generation (as Mahler told Brahms) produces its own astonishing Music and Musicians - as well as its "also-rans": Ms Tabakova should no more be used to exemplify the best of today's Music than Stamitz should the Music of the 1740s - and there is merit in both Stamitz and Tabakova.
But you're quite right: "Tonal" Music doesn't have to be dull - Ronald Stevenson's Passacaglia on DSCH is a magnificent work,
The Passacaglia on DSCH is a large-scale composition for solo piano by the British composer Ronald Stevenson. It was composed between 24 December 1960 and 18...
as is the String Quintet of Alistair Hinton,
both of which are by composers very much with us and in a language that is rooted in Tonality. But it would be wrong to compare Tabakova's slight works with these monumental odysseys - whilst I'm not impressed by the works of hers that I've heard, these are not her aesthetic concerns.
As for electonics "killing" tonality - well, just as the move from Vocal composition to instrumental was reflected in the shift from Modality to Tonality, then so the move to Electronics can be said to mirror the shift away from Tonality. That is why "a future for serious modern classical Music" lies therein.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Ruhevoll
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostBoy, that's a lot of questions!
"Where are our Bachs, Beethovens, Bruckners and Mahlers?" is like asking "Where are the 19th Century's Barretts, Birtwistles, Lachenmanns, and Ferneyhoughs?" or"Where are the 15th Century's Bachs, Beethovens, Bruckners and Mahlers?" Each generation (as Mahler told Brahms) produces its own astonishing Music and Musicians - as well as its "also-rans": Ms Tabakova should no more be used to exemplify the best of today's Music than Stamitz should the Music of the 1740s - and there is merit in both Stamitz and Tabakova.
But you're quite right: "Tonal" Music doesn't have to be dull - Ronald Stevenson's Passacaglia on DSCH is a magnificent work,
The Passacaglia on DSCH is a large-scale composition for solo piano by the British composer Ronald Stevenson. It was composed between 24 December 1960 and 18...
as is the String Quintet of Alistair Hinton,
both of which are by composers very much with us and in a language that is rooted in Tonality. But it would be wrong to compare Tabakova's slight works with these monumental odysseys - whilst I'm not impressed by the works of hers that I've heard, these are not her aesthetic concerns.
As for electonics "killing" tonality - well, just as the move from Vocal composition to instrumental was reflected in the shift from Modality to Tonality, then so the move to Electronics can be said to mirror the shift away from Tonality. That is why "a future for serious modern classical Music" lies therein.
I wonder what you make of Tom Service's analysis of Beethoven's 5th in today's Guardian: http://www.theguardian.com/music/tom...th-tom-service
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The whole of the String Paths CD is available from eMusic for under £4 (£3.78), or you can just download the cello concerto for £1.26, or just the slow movement for 42p. By using this site you can at least decide whether it's worth buying the CD. The slow movement of the cello concerto is indeed rather beautiful. It sounds similar to some works by Pärt, and maybe it doesn't really "go anywhere" - but does that matter? I am interested to note the connection with Diana Burrell, with whom, amongst others, she studied composition. I haven't been able to find any recordings of music by Burrell - so can't comment whether Tabakova's work is in any way derived from one of her mentors.
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