There is a clear distinction between the AE Housman poems and those of Klingsor. Housman was deeply repressed and would have been shocked by any discussion of his sexuality while Klingsor was, in modern parlance, "out." Ravel was setting poems that were acknowledged to be homo-erotic; VW et al weren't. And this is why the replacement of the tenor soloist with a mezzo was significant.
Incidentally, between these two opposites lies Szymanowski's King Roger. The final version of the text was the composer's own and the homo-erotic subtext is evident. Is there any other music more homo-erotic than the Shepherd's song in Act 1? Or is it merely the sub-text of the opera to which I am responding as a gay man?
Incidentally, between these two opposites lies Szymanowski's King Roger. The final version of the text was the composer's own and the homo-erotic subtext is evident. Is there any other music more homo-erotic than the Shepherd's song in Act 1? Or is it merely the sub-text of the opera to which I am responding as a gay man?
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