I wonder where Tippett's music will be by the end of this century? Looking for information on Tippett just now, I came across the piece below and was shocked as I scanned it.
Tippett is really the only composer almost every piece of whose music has some personal meaning for me, even those few pieces of his which I don't at all care for. However, even as I got into his music 20 odd years ago, I became aware of controversy and wide variation in his reputation.
An obituary isn't generally a place to look for or expect to find objective evaluation and the tagline for the one from The Daily Telegraph is a case in point. Tippett, its headline claims, is " ... is assured of a place in the front rank of 20th-century composers."
I understand why Tippett elicits the wildly-varying feelings and opinions he does. His opera texts are hard to swallow, his counterpoint can be 'agnostic' as I've seen it described (unless it's sometimes, still, just played wrong), the music can be organised in such a way that it's 'centre of gravity' does not let it 'balance' overall, as a piece.
But, to me, his music has a forceful personality and, like Beethoven's, it's the personality of someone I should like to know, even feel that I do. It's music, to me, somehow, of the utmost intimacy and humanity and for that reason alone I am surprised it does not inspire more interest, love and loyalty in the world at large.
Tippett is really the only composer almost every piece of whose music has some personal meaning for me, even those few pieces of his which I don't at all care for. However, even as I got into his music 20 odd years ago, I became aware of controversy and wide variation in his reputation.
An obituary isn't generally a place to look for or expect to find objective evaluation and the tagline for the one from The Daily Telegraph is a case in point. Tippett, its headline claims, is " ... is assured of a place in the front rank of 20th-century composers."
I understand why Tippett elicits the wildly-varying feelings and opinions he does. His opera texts are hard to swallow, his counterpoint can be 'agnostic' as I've seen it described (unless it's sometimes, still, just played wrong), the music can be organised in such a way that it's 'centre of gravity' does not let it 'balance' overall, as a piece.
But, to me, his music has a forceful personality and, like Beethoven's, it's the personality of someone I should like to know, even feel that I do. It's music, to me, somehow, of the utmost intimacy and humanity and for that reason alone I am surprised it does not inspire more interest, love and loyalty in the world at large.
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