BaL 28.03.15 - Elgar: Symphony no. 2 in E flat
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Petrushka View PostThat's all interesting stuff and it's worth looking at the reasons why this might be the case.
First of all, the 1st Symphony had had a tremendous success - over 100 performances in its first year - and there must have been many who expected another symphony to be broadly the same. It isn't; instead it's very different in mood and complexity. Moreover, the 2nd ends not with a loud triumphant bang but in something much more ambivalent, whether tranquillity, death, peace or whatever. Taking my own experience as a sort of yardstick, I 'got' the 1st immediately on its first hearing. It swept all before it and I played it again and again for days (40 years ago next month as well). My first experience of the 2nd was just like the US reviews you mention: bafflement, incomprehension and I was not one bit convinced. It took many hearings over the next few years for it to sink in and to recognise it for what it is.
Elgar had had great success with his music in Germany. Richard Strauss labelled him 'the first English progressive' but within 3 years of the first performance of the 2nd Britain and Germany were at war and it dealt a fatal blow to the appreciation of Elgar's music. By the time hostilities had ceased, Elgar's supposedly comfortable Imperial music was seen as old fashioned and stuck in the past. The Second World War 25 years later merely compounded the problem. This labelling of Elgar as the 'imperial' composer has had far reaching consequences which, I think, continue to this day.
Surely, the time is now well past to throw off the shackles of the British Empire and listen to this wonderful emotionally complex personal music anew and appreciate it for what it is. That Elgar only wrote two symphonies might also have hampered that appreciation. However, I hope that, in particular, Barenboim's Berlin recording (and performances) herald a sea-change that will see the Elgar 2 finally achieve the world-wide recognition that, save for the accident of time, it would have had in the first place.
In that context, excepting Holst's Greatest Hit, Elgar is the most frequently performed English Composer, with Walton probably being second. This may be difficult to appreciate from the English Perspective.
Your analysis of the effect of the World Wars may explain why Central Europe may be a bit slow to embrace Elgar. For non Brits he is the Musical Poster boy of Edwardian England. However, that wouldn't explain a lack of acceptance in the States, or the Far East, or Scandinavia (or Russia, except that Svetlanov apparently had a go at it). There is something about the work that leaves non Brits non plussed.
I explored Elgar's Symphonies about 20 years ago. The Second was the hardest to come to terms with, and I eventually developed a liking for it, but I am somewhat astonished to find that others here think it is one of the greatest Symphonies ever penned. So there must be something "innately British" about it that give it such reasonance.
Comment
-
-
According to Richard Osborne's bio of Karajan Elgar 2 was the only score he kept after reviewing several other Elgar works around 1980. According to RO Karajan found the work to be of "absorbing interest".
I read somewhere that when challenged to do more English music - RO [p817 note 8 to chapter 71] mentions VW 4 and 6 as candidates - he said he might if it were not for the likely obvious critical reacion in England that foreign conductors would never be able to get it right. Good excuse to avoid it.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Gordon View PostAccording to Richard Osborne's bio of Karajan Elgar 2 was the only score he kept after reviewing several other Elgar works around 1980. According to RO Karajan found the work to be of "absorbing interest".
I read somewhere that when challenged to do more English music - RO [p817 note 8 to chapter 71] mentions VW 4 and 6 as candidates - he said he might if it were not for the likely obvious critical reacion in England that foreign conductors would never be able to get it right. Good excuse to avoid it.
Comment
-
-
Can anyone please point out anything that is 'innately British' in the Elgar 2? It is so close to the world of Mahler and Strauss as to put it firmly in the Central European tradition.
By the way, Tippett was pretty big in Chicago in the 1970s (his 4th Symphony was first performed by Solti and the CSO) and Birtwistle's Violin Concerto was first performed in Boston."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Petrushka View PostCan anyone please point out anything that is 'innately British' in the Elgar 2? It is so close to the world of Mahler and Strauss as to put it firmly in the Central European tradition.
Comment
-
Comment