Originally posted by french frank
View Post
Light Music
Collapse
X
-
-
-
Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostThe truth is, they mean anything by it which doesn't fit into the more rigorously defined pop "genres". It's of no value as a search engine denominative.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
Comment
-
-
The Elizabethan Serenade - for the sake of anybody wondering what on earth is being argued over - with very appropriate pictures accompanying, in my opinion:
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostThe Elizabethan Serenade - for the sake of anybody wondering what on earth is being argued over - with very appropriate pictures accompanying, in my opinion:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u4XgbIhlOvkIt isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
They would belong to the Music to Binge On category, I would think.
(They don't call him "The Mahler of Derby" for nothing, you know.)
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Master Jacques View Post
To deal with the last (easier) point first, no - I don't think that was Binge's style, and he didn't need to do any of it. I think he spotted that his Andante Cantabile 'had something' to say to his time and place which the retitling would bring out, and he was proved right in spades.
What's more, this quality was picked up in Germany - where, believe it or not, the piece has been even more popular than it is here - as somehow representing the 'new Germany' after the war too. I've got a lovely recording of the Elisabeth-Serenade (as they call it) sung by Eva Lind, which uses words very different from Christopher Hassall's English singing version ("Where the Gentle Avon Flows").
As for the way the piece stretches (rather than breaks) the rules, its contrapuntal density and highly-developed formal symettries (surprisingly complex - I'll accept one of your criteria! - and compressed) are highly unusual for so-called "light music" of the time. What it does - just as Mozart and Schubert do - is put into perspective our criteria for "seriousness" in art, which is often too close to "solemnity" for comfort.
By the way, I wasn't implying that your set of criteria were without value - just that many of them are irrelevant to an attempted value judgement on Elizabethan Serenade (or indeed, Binge's impressive ouevre generally!)
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by LMcD View PostJust out of interest, do 'The Water Mill' and 'Sailing By' break any rules?
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
It irks me that the score is still in copyright so I can’t study these technical points. The front page does reveal a delicacy of scoring (influenced by Dvorak’s Serenade ?) . The main theme has an uncanny similarity to the finale of the Pastoral - it’s even in F major - and the phrasing is again so similar. But to me it’s inferior - fair enough most things are. My criteria might be irrelevant for a judgment as to how good the piece is but I think they are notes towards defining what “seriousness” in music might be . So Beethovens folk song arrangements to me are not “serious “ music 1 but the Eroica is.
By the by, I would take polite issue with finding the best of Beethoven's folk song settings anything other than "serious" music, in the qualitative sense - I offer you "When Will You Come Again, My Faithful Johnny' (just for starters) as deeply haunting music of timeless quality, at least in the mouth of a great singer (e.g. Fischer-Dieskau); and Beethoven siezed on one of the Irish jigs as the main theme of the whirling dance-finale of his 7th Symphony.
Comment
-
-
I've only just noticed this thread. I remember mocking my Dad's love of Light Music, but as I got older, I realised just how well crafted and enjoyable much of it is.
Coates is a favourite, but so far I haven't noticed anyone putting in a word for dear old Ketelby. I find his music particularly interesting because it spans quite a long period with different styles. One of his later pieces 'The Clock and the Dresden figures' sounds really very 1930s....it is a superbly witty concertino for piano and orchestra which I adore. It's also fascinating to compare older and newer versions. John Lanchbery takes it at quite a leisurely pace, but go back to the original Ketelby recording and he takes it at a terrific lick!
Comment
-
Comment