Haydn isn't Beethoven or anybody - just himself. And this is a typical example of just how wonderful Haydn can be:
Is Haydn the new Beethoven?
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I completely agree about the pointlessness of comparisons between composers.
I think it a pity that, while there are now many more ensembles that appreciate the quality of Haydn's string quartets, few of them are prepared to put them centre stage as it were in a concert. The Lindsays were IIRC the last ensemble to do that, indeed to mount a whole series of concerts devoted exclusively to the cycle of quartets (from op 20). I was lucky enough to attend some of those concerts at Wigmore Hall and they still stay in my memory. All too often, a Haydn quartet is seen almost as the equivalent of an overture in an orchestral concert, an hors d'oeuvre to the main course.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostMy apologies ...
Replace "seemed to be overlooking" with "demonstrated a severe lack of appreciation for", then?
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Originally posted by aeolium View PostI completely agree about the pointlessness of comparisons between composers.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostI agree, but that's not what I meant when I started this thread. Comparison is pointless - as I said, in the future it could just as easily be Salieri who is considered the pre-eminent, or primus inter paras, or the guvnor (the title is up to the individual and not defined necessarily by one's social class or culture). I'm just saying that I'm sensing a change.
Anyway, mindful of the German-Amercian composer and Hindemith pupil Bernhard Heiden (1910-2000), is Heiden the new Beef Oven!?
Yup - got me coat already...
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View Postin the future it could just as easily be Salieri who is considered the pre-eminent
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I love Haydn but I think he may get sidelined a bit by programmers and a broader listening public, partly because his music/melodies don't seem to be headline grabbing in the way that those of Bach, Mozart, Beethoven can be*, and partly perhaps because one senses in his music a less assertive, less demanding aspect to his psyche.
Although to my ears his music overflows with melody/wit/rhythm/compassion etc, I wonder if there's something in its nature that doesn't insist one listens in quite the way that the others do. If Haydn's played correctly but without sensitivity, would its treasures be perhaps more buried than those of Bach, Mozart or Beethoven played similarly, the latter still communicating enough of themselves to stand out somehow? Subjective and lumpish generalisations, but just wondering about a possible connection between the music and its reception.
I remember seeing an Andras Schiff recital in a school gym in Amersham somewhere in the mid 70's, when he played Haydn's G major sonata (Hob XVI :40) and feeling I had never heard such a perfect thing.
*(There is Deutschland, Deutschland über alles, but that seems a slightly different case.)
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostThen why suggest that Haydn's "evolution over 104 [sic] Symphonies" was less than Beethoven's over Nine?
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostI agree, but that's not what I meant when I started this thread. Comparison is pointless - as I said, in the future it could just as easily be Salieri who is considered the pre-eminent, or primus inter paras, or the guvnor (the title is up to the individual and not defined necessarily by one's social class or culture). I'm just saying that I'm sensing a change.
Vivaldi is another interesting figure as far as "reputation history" is concerned. In the days when just a handful of his works were performed (and then in the manner that Bach was performed - ie, as if it was Brahms) it was easy to dismiss him with the "one concerto a hundred times" jibes. Now that so many more works are known, and in such better performances ("better" in the sense that they bring out the individuality of this Music in ways that couldn't be done when only around a dozen pieces were known), Vivaldi has taken his place amongst the names of composers who repeatedly create Music that persistently delights and astonishes.
I don't think the same can happen with Salieri - BUT, I'm suddenly uncomfortably aware that I'm basing this airily confident prediction on a knowledge of considerably fewer than a dozen of his works![FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Sir Stanford
Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostMost of us living today were brought up on the belief that Beethoven is the guvnor. Something that I have never really questioned. However, I'm sensing something of a sea-change. Haydn seems to be the composer who more and more is being talked about in the highest of terms. This is palpable on this forum, for example. Much more talk about his string quartets these days and as for his symphonies, his are the ones that generate most interest.
Perhaps that's just the way it goes. In 200 years, the received opinion might be that Salieri is the be all and end all of classical music.
I'm not sure that Haydn changed the face of music like Beethoven did Beethoven.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostDid Haydn over his 104, produce anything on the scale of Beethoven 3, 5 or 9 as examples? To which your response will probably to baffle me with complex musical examples.
OK - if you're using length as a criterion, then yes - Haydn's Symphonies are of lesser greatness than Beethoven's. So, where does that leave Gliere's Third Symphony?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI don't think so (he said, with all the confidence of someone who is subsequently proven wrong) - Haydn was always, in name at least, revered as one of the great Classical "trinity". Even in the 19th Century, when most of his work was unplayed (and, that which was, was patronised), there was a consensus that he had a significance that Salieri never really had.
Vivaldi is another interesting figure as far as "reputation history" is concerned. In the days when just a handful of his works were performed (and then in the manner that Bach was performed - ie, as if it was Brahms) it was easy to dismiss him with the "one concerto a hundred times" jibes. Now that so many more works are known, and in such better performances ("better" in the sense that they bring out the individuality of this Music in ways that couldn't be done when only around a dozen pieces were known), Vivaldi has taken his place amongst the names of composers who repeatedly create Music that persistently delights and astonishes.
I don't think the same can happen with Salieri - BUT, I'm suddenly uncomfortably aware that I'm basing this airily confident prediction on a knowledge of considerably fewer than a dozen of his works!
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostAh, sorry! I thought you were referring specifically to a sense of "evolution" in style and methodology over the course of the two composers' symphonic careers.
OK - if you're using length as a criterion, then yes - Haydn's Symphonies are of lesser greatness than Beethoven's. So, where does that leave Gliere's Third Symphony?Last edited by ahinton; 16-05-16, 14:55.
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