Originally posted by ostuni
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BaL 15.05.21 - C.P.E. Bach: Cello Concerto no. 3 in A
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I remember being rather shocked at the time to hear that, following research, Hogwood would not be using any keyboard continuo in the early symphonies of his Haydn cycle. (This has been discussed often on these pages!)
But I also remember being surprised that upon hearing them, I didn't feel in any way deprived. Maybe that is more due to Haydn's brilliant writing in that it doesn't need a keyboard 'filling in' - the more scholarly of you may be able to shed some light on that for me.
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I don't think one has to come down on one side or the other of this argument. Haydn's symphonies were quite widely performed in their time, no doubt sometimes with continuo and sometimes without, depending on circumstances. While Haydn presumably played co-principal to Tomasini in pieces like no.45 (which I think is one of the pieces of evidence brought up by Hogwood), he also played the little keyboard solo at the end of no.98... what had he been doing in the performance prior to that? sitting there doing nothing?
Something else I remember Hogwood saying was that people are used to thinking that the music sounds too sparse without a continuo keyboard but that in fact that sparseness was what Haydn wanted and he wrote with that in mind. Maybe so. But CPE Bach was almost a generation older, had grown up in the continuo era and was an accomplished keyboard player to a degree that Haydn seems not to have been, so I wouldn't think of extrapolating from one to the other in either direction. That's my two cents' worth anyway!
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Maybe so. But CPE Bach was almost a generation older, had grown up in the continuo era and was an accomplished keyboard player to a degree that Haydn seems not to have been, so I wouldn't think of extrapolating from one to the other in either direction. That's my two cents' worth anyway!
Changing the subject slightly, I was troubled by Hannah's saying, quite near the start, that people should not regard C.P.E. Bach as a transitional figure. My immediate reaction was that I shall think of him however I like! But Hannah's point might have been better expressed by saying that CPE didn't think of himself as 'transitional' No, of course he didn't. Like any composer he was writing in the style of his own generation, heading for the 'galante'. He was obviously not thinking 'I'm somewhere in between my Dad and whoever comes next'. Incidentally, CPE Bach and Johann Stamitz were born within three years of each other.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View Post
Changing the subject slightly, I was troubled by Hannah's saying, quite near the start, that people should not regard C.P.E. Bach as a transitional figure. My immediate reaction was that I shall think of him however I like! But Hannah's point might have been better expressed by saying that CPE didn't think of himself as 'transitional' No, of course he didn't. Like any composer he was writing in the style of his own generation, heading fot the 'galante'. He was obviously not thinking 'I'm somewhere in between my Dad and whoever comes next'. Incidentally, CPE Bach and Johann Stamitz were born within three years of each other.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostA very sensible summing up if I may say so. I do get a bit worried about dogmatic 'research' conclusions when there is nothing concrete to base the research on. It's quite possible, for instance, that sometimes keyboard continuo was used and sometimes not.
Changing the subject slightly, I was troubled by Hannah's saying, quite near the start, that people should not regard C.P.E. Bach as a transitional figure. My immediate reaction was that I shall think of him however I like! But Hannah's point might have been better expressed by saying that CPE didn't think of himself as 'transitional' No, of course he didn't. Like any composer he was writing in the style of his own generation, heading for the 'galante'. He was obviously not thinking 'I'm somewhere in between my Dad and whoever comes next'. Incidentally, CPE Bach and Johann Stamitz were born within three years of each other.
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Originally posted by Heldenleben View PostYes I Thought that was odd. Aren’t most artists , in any genre if they are worth engaging with “transitional” figures ?
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post. . . A moment's reflection of course shows that the work of those "greats" was in fact transitional too, and that the use of the word to indicate "in-between" artists like CPE Bach (and even more so his brother Johann Christian, who can hardly be mentioned without something like "pointing towards Mozart" cropping up) results from a circular kind of thinking. . . .
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI think "transitional" in this kind of context is often code for "lesser" figures whose work doesn't fully realise what are regarded as the peaks of musical achievement as exemplified by JS Bach, Mozart and Beethoven. A moment's reflection of course shows that the work of those "greats" was in fact transitional too, and that the use of the word to indicate "in-between" artists like CPE Bach (and even more so his brother Johann Christian, who can hardly be mentioned without something like "pointing towards Mozart" cropping up) results from a circular kind of thinking. Not for the first time, the idea of what actually makes "great art" or a "great artist" shows itself to be based on quite shaky foundations. Does this matter? Only in so far as it often creates an unnecessary lack of appreciation of composers like CPE Bach, much of whose work (his choral music for example) is still very little known.
A more accurate description would have Mozart drawing from JC rather then the latter “pointing towards “ the former...
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostIt's by analogy with "song cycle" isn't it? Maybe you object to that too...
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Originally posted by Heldenleben View PostI wonder whether the song cycle term emerged from musicologists ,with An die ferne Geliebte being usually credited as the first example , whereas the symphony cycle is the invention of concert promoters and record co execs wanting to market the complete Rattle, Karajan etc experience ?
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