Prokofiev gets a lot of listening time here, but I find that of his 7 Symphonies, the only two that inspire repeat listening are the two 'popular ' choices, 1 & 5. I've been trying to like the 6th for years, lately sampling a few versions on Apple, but really it just doesn't click for me. I can't think of another top flight composer with a large Symphonic output that for me, at least, is filled with duds.
Prokofiev 'Other' Symphonies
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostProkofiev gets a lot of listening time here, but I find that of his 7 Symphonies, the only two that inspire repeat listening are the two 'popular ' choices, 1 & 5. I've been trying to like the 6th for years, lately sampling a few versions on Apple, but really it just doesn't click for me. I can't think of another top flight composer with a large Symphonic output that for me, at least, is filled with duds.
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostProkofiev gets a lot of listening time here, but I find that of his 7 Symphonies, the only two that inspire repeat listening are the two 'popular ' choices, 1 & 5. I've been trying to like the 6th for years, lately sampling a few versions on Apple, but really it just doesn't click for me. I can't think of another top flight composer with a large Symphonic output that for me, at least, is filled with duds.
As for Prokofiev, I had the opportunity to hear his 3rd in a recent concert which confirmed the high opinion I have of it, especially the slow movement and Scherzo. The 6th is also one I like a lot, and the 2nd for me indicates a direction I'm sorry Prokofiev didn't travel further on. Both of these involve quite radical structural features: the end of the development section in the first movement of the 6th which I like to think of as a forerunner of the climax of Stockhausen's Gruppen, and the final variation in the second movement of the 2nd, where the theme is exploded into isolated stabs not entirely unlike the corresponding moment in Carter's Symphony of Three Orchestras. The 1st is of course a remarkable piece of work; but the 5th has never grabbed me and I have no recollection at all of the 7th although I must have listened to it a few times.
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Back in the 80's (!!), we in Scotland heard a LOT of Prokofiev Symphonies from Neemi Jarvi and the SNO as they recorded vast swathes of his music. Now in those days, I was in my early 20's and loved the sound of a symphony orchestra knocking seven bells out of a Russian composer's oeuvre but I always found Prokofiev's Symphonies, apart from 1, 5 and 7 to be so much rammy! Eventually, I got their CDs but I still don't find these 'non popular' works to be interesting.
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostBack in the 80's (!!), we in Scotland heard a LOT of Prokofiev Symphonies from Neemi Jarvi and the SNO as they recorded vast swathes of his music. Now in those days, I was in my early 20's and loved the sound of a symphony orchestra knocking seven bells out of a Russian composer's oeuvre but I always found Prokofiev's Symphonies, apart from 1, 5 and 7 to be so much rammy! Eventually, I got their CDs but I still don't find these 'non popular' works to be interesting.
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I consider the sixth symphony to be one of Prokofiev's greatest works, and one of the great 20th century symphonies.
After the Classical, the first one I got to know was the revised 4th, which I still prefer to the original version though some find it a bit bombastic. They are both based on the ballet score The Prodigal Son, which I would rather hear than either version of the symphony. It is the third symphony which is based on The Fiery Angel, and one can't blame the composer for taking music from the opera which he never heard performed. I once heard Edward Downes (who didn't think it a specially good piece) talking of how Prokofiev shows his mastery of orchestration by actually silencing the strings at the climax of the first movement development, allowing the wind sonority to blaze forth. I like this symphony, for all that Robert Layton considers the outer movements to be grossly overscored!
I don't bother with the seventh at all.
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Quite why the 3rd isn't far more popular is a mystery to me.
Definitely very near the top of a list of works I would love to hear live.
In fact , I may listen to it now.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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