Originally posted by Mary Chambers
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Music that doesn't move you
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostFair enough! I agree that a lot of tedious music has been written in B flat, although for me Beethoven's op.130/133 makes up for it.
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostNot a great fan of Britten, especially the operas whose subject matter I find questionable at best, but where is that envy emoticon when you really need it?
My blind spots are Delius, Liszt, opera in general apart from Wagner, lieder, chamber music in general and RVW Sea Symphony. I expect the chamber music one to change as I get older and possibly lieder as well. Can't believe some of the more startling admissions in this thread.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostThreads like this one always sort-of fizzle out whenever they appear: people say the same things about the same pieces/composers/performances as they did all the times before, and offer the same "explanations" for their choices - explanations as wet as the semi-tautological "I don't like it because it's boring".
I've always found Schoenberg's piano concerto nasty and turgid, but this afternoon I listened to it (Brendel/KubelÃk since you ask) and enjoyed it a lot, although at the same time it brought into sharp focus one of the things that irritates me about Schoenberg's music which is the way he uses repeated notes in his melodies.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI've always found Schoenberg's piano concerto nasty and turgid
but this afternoon I listened to it (Brendel/KubelÃk since you ask) and enjoyed it a lot, although at the same time it brought into sharp focus one of the things that irritates me about Schoenberg's music which is the way he uses repeated notes in his melodies.
I shall look out for that, next time I listen to it. I have the Brendel Kubelik, DG.
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Music that doesn’t move me -
Most Delius, except the operas.
RVW Sea Symphony.
Some days Elgar 1&2, some days, not.
Most Philip Glass, especially the symphonies.
Most times Schubert 9, but sometimes I kinda get it.
But I think I pretty much like everything else ever written, by just about anyone.
EDIT: I hadn’t read any of the posts on here, except RB’s AS pc one, and just having glanced down this page alone, I must add Brahms’ piano concerti (prompted by EA’s view on #2)
I don’t see how anyone can’t like Schumann 1, and Different Trains is fabulous.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostChanging tastes tend in my case to go in the other direction, that is I go for years thinking the music of a particular composer, or of a particular genre (eg. Lieder), is not for me by any stretch, and then at a certain point there's a "click" and I plunge headlong into whatever it is. In other cases it's a slow process. In many cases it happens through a nudge in the right direction from someone else, who might not even now s/he is doing it. (That's one reason I hang around here!) As a result I've come to think that if there's something I don't like it may well be principally the result of lack of imagination on my part. It's perhaps a question somehow of finding a reflection of oneself in the music (or sonic art whatever the difference is), or finding a reflection of the music in oneself. So if I say I don't appreciate Sibelius or Tchaikovsky or wind quintets that may well mean they're waiting in the wings to become important to me at some future point. On the other hand if I say I don't appreciate Rachmaninov or romantic Italian opera or pretty much all British music between Purcell and Cardew with the exception of Tippett and some RVW, that future point may well be situated some way beyond whatever my lifespan ends up being!
That said, I am still waiting for the penny to drop, re: John Coltrane's 'sheets of sound' period. I'm confident it will, eventually, though.
Ditto: Trout Mask Replica.
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Originally posted by Conchis View PostI'm arrogant enough to believe that if something is 'good', I'll get it one day. I"m not given to bragging but i know (and other people have told me, with envy) that I have superlative taste. I've also got the stamina to make an effort until it all drops into place and not just dismiss something I don't get as 'rubbish', in the lazy way that people (particularly in the English-speaking world) tend to.
That said, I am still waiting for the penny to drop, re: John Coltrane's 'sheets of sound' period. I'm confident it will, eventually, though.
Ditto: Trout Mask Replica.
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Originally posted by Conchis View PostI've also got the stamina to make an effort until it all drops into place."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostBut not quite always - there could always be some thought-provoking spinoffs among the variously-worded statements of "I know what I like and I like what I ruddy well know". Who would have thought, for example, that a discussion of the music of Eric Whitacre would spawn an exchange about the systematic permutation of intervals? - albeit as an example of "sins of one's youth" (maybe it's serialism that keeps me feeling so young!).[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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