Originally posted by Richard Barrett
View Post
The death of western art music has been greatly exaggerated
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostI note that you have also completely dismissed Reilly's article describing it as 'worthless', I think. Apologies if I'm mistaken.
If so, isn't that being every bit as 'simplistic' as Reilly himself in his article? Wrongheaded maybe but worthless? Certainly not!
Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostHowever, there are undoubtedly many music-lovers, no doubt atheists/agnostics included, who share Reilly's intense dislike of the music he himself is 'not keen on'.
Put simply, they prefer a good tune and/or something that stirs their emotions or inspires the spirit.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostRest assured, french frank, I'm well aware what the topic under discussion is supposed to be about ...
I note that you have also completely dismissed Reilly's article describing it as 'worthless', I think. Apologies if I'm mistaken.
If so, isn't that being every bit as 'simplistic' as Reilly himself in his article? Wrongheaded maybe but worthless? Certainly not!
The 'relevance' of pointing out that almost everyone who takes an active part in a debate such as this might also have an 'agenda' is merely to demonstrate that 'agendas' are not particularly peculiar to people like Mr Reilly when they dare to express an opinion some of us here might not particularly wish to read.
The OP presumably thought so as well ... he/she clearly did an excellent job in encouraging the advertising of all sorts of 'agendas' in this thread, that's for sure!
Enough ...
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostAll very interesting ...
There are clearly some very knowledgeable people on this Forum and the differences of opinion amongst the knowledgeable themselves are quite fascinating but not really that surprising.
Some here may deplore the very idea but I have searched the internet to discover for myself what else Mr Reilly has to say on the subject of music rather than rely on dismissive and clearly 'agenda-driven' howls of disapproval regarding the man's politics and religion. Mr Reilly certainly has his own quite open 'agenda' on music but you don't have to move very far to find plenty of other, quite separate 'agendas' on here, french frank!
So ... I have been perusing the pages of Mr Reilly's book Surprised by Beauty. I have downloaded it, will read it in full at my leisure, and report back to members. I'm sure some will be on tenterhooks awaiting that report so I'll be as quick as possible.
Mr Reilly's views certainly have the benefit of consistency, if nothing else. I like that ... consistency immediately commands my respect and attention. Still, I have just been skimming some of the pages though obviously I must dig an awful lot deeper.
However, I was struck by a chapter on Hans Gál the Austrian-Jewish composer whose music was suppressed by the Nazis and who subsequently fled his homeland and settled in Scotland. It's very interesting indeed. Members who claim Mr Reilly is antisemitic might be particularly interested. Or maybe not.
I won't provide the actual evidence by posting the link. That would be most unfair on some members. Those who really want to see the truth will search for the truth themselves. Often it's the only way ...
With one by Gal.
Regarding Reilly and Anti Semitism, again, as I have stated Mr Tipps, his is of the more subtle variety than that of eliminationist Anti Semites. He views the so called decline of Western Music as do the adoption of Serialism, which was invented and promulgated by Jews, and this Music could only be saved by the explicitly Christian Composers that he extols.
This kind of Culturally oriented Anti Semitism was quite prevalent in Europe before the war, particularly in Germany and France. Furtwanglers's correspondance is filled with references to Jews destroying Music (including his letters written prior to 1933). Ansermet continued to proclaim publicly after the War that Jews had ruined Music and were responsible for the scourge of Communism.
The Holocaust made public expression of these concepts difficult but the attitudes didn't die with Hitler.
People that hold such attitudes, such as Reilly, are still capable of being friends with individual Jews, of admiring Jewish Artists, but are still Anti Semitic. Furtwangler went to some personal risk during the Third Reich to assist individual Jews (including Schoenberg, whose Music he detested). Karl Bohm, who was living in Munich in 1923 and was a fervent Nazi cheering Hitler's aborted comic opera-esq coup, later developed a strong friendship with Leonard Bernstein. And Reilly can champion Hans Gal.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostI remember reading the Gal chapter. I had never previously heard of Gal or some of the other Composers that Reilly champions (Gal may be known in the U.K. since he worked there; here he was completely unknown until some recordings were released).
Regarding Reilly and Anti Semitism, again, as I have stated Mr Tipps, his is of the more subtle variety than that of eliminationist Anti Semites. He views the so called decline of Western Music as do the adoption of Serialism, which was invented and promulgated by Jews, and this Music could only be saved by the explicitly Christian Composers that he extols.
This kind of Culturally oriented Anti Semitism was quite prevalent in Europe before the war, particularly in Germany and France. Furtwanglers's correspondance is filled with references to Jews destroying Music (including his letters written prior to 1933). Ansermet continued to proclaim publicly after the War that Jews had ruined Music and were responsible for the scourge of Communism.
The Holocaust made public expression of these concepts difficult but the attitudes didn't die with Hitler.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostMr Reilly's views certainly have the benefit of consistency, if nothing else. I like that ... consistency immediately commands my respect and attention."...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Caliban View PostConsistently charming, old Reilly, ain't he... http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/0...n_5268524.html
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostAssuming you mean Tavener...
I do think it's entirely fair, given the effort he clearly put into appearing almost comically pious whenever his photo was taken!
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by jean View PostJudging someone's music by their demeanour seems no more justified than judging it by their race.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Caliban View PostConsistently charming, old Reilly, ain't he... http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/0...n_5268524.html
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post"[C]ompletely unknown" as a composer, but the US Dover scores of the works of Brahms are all the editions made by Gal, rfg.
As an aside...why do Brahms scores require an Editor? Brahms spent so much of his time editing works of Schubert, Schumann, Palestrina, among others that I would have thought that those works of his that he didn't destroy would have been combed pretty closely for errors
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostAs an aside...why do Brahms scores require an Editor? Brahms spent so much of his time editing works of Schubert, Schumann, Palestrina, among others that I would have thought that those works of his that he didn't destroy would have been combed pretty closely for errors[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
Comment
-
-
I should add that the Breitkopf & Hartel edition on which Gal worked was for the first "Complete Brahms Edition" (IIRC, in preparation for the Brahms Centenary which occurred in a year overtaken by infamous political events) - and in which the original version of the First Piano Trio was published for the first time (and included in the Dover edition). Gal is refreshingly honest about his work, giving credit where such is due - of the first two String Quartets, he says of Simrock's first publication of 1873:
Scores and parts are nearly flawless ... A comparison with the original manuscripts yielded nothing significant for this edition.
[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostA not unreasonable thought - nonetheless, engraving errors still appeared in subsequent editions, so that, for example, the 1919 Peters Edition of the Piano Quintet, incorporates some of Brahms' corrections handwritten onto the original published version (Reiter-Badermann in 1865) but neglects to include many of the composer's bowing and phrase markings. (And there are, apparently, engraving errors all of their own in the 1919 edition, too.) Gal produced his editions in the 1920s for Breitkopf & Hartel, using the original publications, Brahms' manuscripts, and later editions to create a published version incorporating more of the composer's ideas (and fewer errors) than had been included in previous published versions. It would not surprise me, of course, to discover that more recent Urtext editions correct errors/glitches in Gal's editions - but for domestic study of the works (and for the joy of "simply" following a broadcast/recording of the works at home) the Dover editions are a very good and inexpensive means of having copies of the scores.
Comment
-
Comment