I've just read this interesting piece in the Guardian by DJ Taylor on authors' reputations - why they wax and wane. It's set me thinking about the same issue with composers.
I remember my brothers listening to Sibelius with enthusiasm in the early 1950s - then he seemed to go out of fashion for a while after his death, before a revival.
I find the reputation of Mozart in various centuries intriguing.
And have always been curious about the role played by William Glock et al in promoting certain kinds of contemporary music over others.
And so on and so forth.
As far as I know this has not had a thread before (though I may well be wrong). I decided not to put Composers' in the thread title as there may equally be conductors whose reputation is worthy of comment. Klemperer springs to mind.
I remember my brothers listening to Sibelius with enthusiasm in the early 1950s - then he seemed to go out of fashion for a while after his death, before a revival.
I find the reputation of Mozart in various centuries intriguing.
And have always been curious about the role played by William Glock et al in promoting certain kinds of contemporary music over others.
And so on and so forth.
As far as I know this has not had a thread before (though I may well be wrong). I decided not to put Composers' in the thread title as there may equally be conductors whose reputation is worthy of comment. Klemperer springs to mind.
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