Originally posted by ahinton
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Music you've still not grown to like
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostSome of that might be true, but it's a shift from what you said earlier. And I don't think that your point about music that's being listened to for the first time is valid.
Going back to what you said about Wagner preparing us for Mahler, Mahler for 2VS etc (which I don'y buy anyway) it would mean that the scores of millions of people that are fans of Metallica, Slayer, Megadeth and Anthrax, can't appreciate them properly without first having heard Black Sabbath and Motorhead; and that Black Sabbath prepared thrash/death metal fans for Motorhead, and Motorhead in turn prepared them for Metallica et al. Well no, it didn't work like that. Plus, the experience of hearing thrash bands is repeated and your point about 'listened to for the first time' doesn't work.
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Originally posted by Suffolkcoastal View PostIt tends to be certain works, rather than whole outputs, of composers that I have problems with. The composers where I just struggle with or just cannot get on with a considerable proportion of their output are: Mahler (of course), the 3rd Symphony is among my top 5 dislikes of all; Medtner, Beliini, Donizetti (though I have made some progress with some works of theirs in recent years); Poulenc (things have improved here though), George Lloyd, sorry I find absolutely nothing but empty floundering rhetoric in his music; J Strauss II, Arnold Rosner (shockingly bad composer), Arvo Part (bores me totally),Piazzolla, Birtwistle - I just will not do anything for me except give me a headache, the whole soundworld comes across as oppressively claustrophobic; Colin Matthews, Turnage & George Benjamin (not just the music, the man himself makes my flesh creep). Plus all those awful imitation composers such as Nyman, Whiteacre and similar bad jokes.
Sorry, rant over, having a rough time of it at the moment!
Some names have the same effect on me,not George Lloyd though.
Mahler is a strange one for me,sort of in the 'music you used to like,have grown to dislike but will probably like again' category.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostYou know much more about rock music than I, so I can't argue with you on these points.
Composers working in what some have called "the German tradition" are generally more conscious of wanting to place themselves in relation to their predecessors' contributions than those of other traditions.
James Hetfield of Metallica appears as though he would crawl over miles of broken bottles just to stick matches in Lemmy's turds. But this does not mean thrash metal fans don't appreciate Metallica's music, just because many of them have never heard of Lemmy (Motorhead).
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostI can't recall the number of times I've tried Bruckner, but I can't fight the boredom that creeps in after a while - how ever much I enjoyed it at the beginning. And 'boredom' is the right word for me, because my usual thought - sometimes expressed out loud - is something like "get on with it! - oh, I can't be bothered with this!". And I do try decent versions (I have the Tintner and Wand Cologne sets).
So it's me...
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The composer whom I'm hoping one day to hear the light with is Verdi. I adore Falstaff and Otello, and greatly enjoy the Requiem, Aida, and the first act of Traviata. But with the best of intentions, my attention wanders very quickly in the other works (although I find Trovatore hilarious in a Pythonesque way, which I don't think is how I'm supposed to respond). Many, many people whose opinions I greatly respect regard his work with the same awe and astonishment that I feel for Bruckner (for example) - which is why I keep trying with it. But it just sounds silly, trivial and hammy to me so far. I'd rather listen to G&S!
In fact, most Italian repertoire between 1750 and 1950 doesn't stir my beans - Norma, L'Elisir d'Amore, bits of Puccini I quite like. But even so, I wished that Pappano's programme on Tenors had spent less time on this repertoire and more on proper Music![FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostThe composer whom I'm hoping one day to hear the light with is Verdi. I adore Falstaff and Otello, and greatly enjoy the Requiem, Aida, and the first act of Traviata. But with the best of intentions, my attention wanders very quickly in the other works (although I find Trovatore hilarious in a Pythonesque way, which I don't think is how I'm supposed to respond). Many, many people whose opinions I greatly respect regard his work with the same awe and astonishment that I feel for Bruckner (for example) - which is why I keep trying with it. But it just sounds silly, trivial and hammy to me so far. I'd rather listen to G&S!
In fact, most Italian repertoire between 1750 and 1950 doesn't stir my beans - Norma, L'Elisir d'Amore, bits of Puccini I quite like. But even so, I wished that Pappano's programme on Tenors had spent less time on this repertoire and more on proper Music!
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostThe composer whom I'm hoping one day to hear the light with is Verdi. I adore Falstaff and Otello, and greatly enjoy the Requiem, Aida, and the first act of Traviata. But with the best of intentions, my attention wanders very quickly in the other works (although I find Trovatore hilarious in a Pythonesque way, which I don't think is how I'm supposed to respond). Many, many people whose opinions I greatly respect regard his work with the same awe and astonishment that I feel for Bruckner (for example) - which is why I keep trying with it. But it just sounds silly, trivial and hammy to me so far. I'd rather listen to G&S!
In fact, most Italian repertoire between 1750 and 1950 doesn't stir my beans - Norma, L'Elisir d'Amore, bits of Puccini I quite like. But even so, I wished that Pappano's programme on Tenors had spent less time on this repertoire and more on proper Music!
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