English-of-its-time sums it up well. Wouldn't the Finns say that Sibelius's music expresses the spirit of his country and I daresay the Czechs might say the same of Smetana, Janacek or Dvorak, add other countries at will.
Sic!
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by visualnickmos View PostSevillaƱa, Three Bavarian Dances, Alassio, and no doubt there are many more similar examples...... - Florida Suite.......
But I think this sort of illustrates my point - or more accurately, my question. I don't know if there can be a definitive answer.Last edited by Serial_Apologist; 21-07-14, 16:12.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Stanfordian View PostHiya Pabmusic,
Elgar's music as been used as processional music for many state occasions and used on tv and radio for royal family, state ceremony or some English event that it has become firmly associated to this sense of Englishness. In the same way Parry's I was Glad and Jerusalem is used to accompany English events.
It's interesting that the catholic Elgar made no attempt to seek inspiration from the wonders of English tudor polyphony or reach back further. Neither did he find English folk song as a starting point. In that respect I think that his contemporaries Vaughan Williams and Holst have more claim to be truly English in their music.
Apart from the two great symphonies and the violin concerto, it would have been nice if he had also been able to imagine works like the Tallis Fantasia or Egdon Heath.
Comment
-
-
Elgar and Walton sound rather German to me. RVW sounds French, and Britten could pass for American (though many of the Americans also sound French). Tippett does sound English after a while, but the early works are definitely Italian. Holst is also rather Italian, except for The Planets which is Russian.
Conversely, Franck is English through and through, as are Myaskovsky and Barber. And sometimes Borodin. It's a tricky business, assigning composers' music to the correct national stereotypes.
Comment
-
-
I was watching a Public Television broadcast on the Origins of WW 1 recently. It may have been a BBC production, as our Public Television is underfunded and relies on BBC content. At one point the shows discussed the British Royals.
The music that accompanied footage of the King? It was the tutti from Borodin In The Steppes Of Central Asia. Apparentlyly music written to celebrate the Romanovs appeared quintessentially British to the producers.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostI was watching a Public Television broadcast on the Origins of WW 1 recently. It may have been a BBC production, as our Public Television is underfunded and relies on BBC content. At one point the shows discussed the British Royals.
The music that accompanied footage of the King? It was the tutti from Borodin In The Steppes Of Central Asia. Apparentlyly music written to celebrate the Romanovs appeared quintessentially British to the producers.
Judging from my experience mixing documentaries,( admittedly from a way back) many TV directors have little or no musical knowledge, they simply get stuff from the gram library and pick what fits. I lost count of the number of times I tried to talk them out of bunging on Spring from The Seasons, even Tchaikovsky's Romeo and Juliet got chosen occasionally. Most of the younger ones only know rock music, and try to find a way to squeeze in their current favourites.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by kea View PostElgar and Walton sound rather German to me. RVW sounds French, and Britten could pass for American (though many of the Americans also sound French). Tippett does sound English after a while, but the early works are definitely Italian. Holst is also rather Italian, except for The Planets which is Russian.
Conversely, Franck is English through and through, as are Myaskovsky and Barber. And sometimes Borodin. It's a tricky business, assigning composers' music to the correct national stereotypes.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Sir Velo View PostYou had me going for a while!
In contrast to Ferret in #22 I do find traces of the modal in Elgar - cf. the opening of the slow movement of the second symphony comes most immediately to mind. Then there is the pronoucedly pre-Renaissance feel of the open fifths organum texture of the opening of the Third, with its nods in the direction of Havergal Brian, noted by Anthony Payne. Notably much of the harmonic/contrapuntal language of the Introduction and Allegro is modal - there is a robust rusticality about the work that must as surely express Elgar's love of the Mendips as Ken Russell's 1962 portrayal of the boyhood Edward's horeseback gallop across their summits makes as real an image as any imagined transcription to film on a landscape theme. Can there be any doubt that this work influenced later composers with pastoralism strong in their makeup: Bliss in the Music for Strings; Tippett in the Double Concerto? One should not forget that there is a great deal of the modal in Brahms' music - another big influence of course, and that it may not be folk music-inspired but liturgical music of the Renaissance absorbed through the composer's Catholicism that renders passages in the music folk-like - Elgar did say he used a WELSH folk song for the broad climaxing theme (not the fugal one though that is modal too). Of course, Elgar notoriously said "I AM folk song" when asked about its presence in his music.
Comment
-
-
i no longer know what 'English' or 'England' refers to; the land that is here seems awfully reductive as in music from the land that is here [and not there] ... but the minute one brings in the notion of the culture history and societies of the people who live/have lived on the land that is here ... well it gets tricky eh? i have the same difficulties with the term 'Scottish' bagpipes and all ... the common root stock dna of the people of these islands pre-dates all this national stuff
Eighty percent of the DNA of most Britons, according to modern research, has been passed down from a few thousand individuals who hunted in this region during the last Ice Age. Compared to this, subsequent migrations from mainland Europe had little genetic impact on the British.
wicki
.... is Elgar a part of the Victorian invention of tradition?According to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo View Post...the common root stock dna of the people of these islands pre-dates all this national stuff...
Comment
-
-
Richard Barrett
Originally posted by visualnickmos View PostHere in France, the music of Elgar is used in bucket-loads as background to numerous documentaries, or programmes that demand a certain level of reverence.
Comment
Comment