Originally posted by richardfinegold
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A Question About The Impressionists and America
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostThe Concert Music here from Composers that were trained in German Academies May make a good initial impression but ultimately lacks substance and for lack of a better word, authenticity. When Composers began to embrace their ‘American-ness’ then worthwhile Music was produced[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostYes - but isn't it interesting that so many had to go to Paris in order to be able to do so; as if they needed the distance in order to put into perspective which of the abundance of multi-cultural influences they needed in order to express this "authenticity"?
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostDid Berlioz pre-empt impressionist music with the 'scenes aux champs' in SF?
...and surely there is an impressionist feel to Copland's music from his French training!
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostYes - but isn't it interesting that so many had to go to Paris in order to be able to do so; as if they needed the distance in order to put into perspective which of the abundance of multi-cultural influences they needed in order to express this "authenticity"?bong ching
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Originally posted by eighthobstruction View Postit was on last Monday 15th https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episod...-in-the-street
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Originally posted by eighthobstruction View Post....they said the very same thing about Joyce going to Trieste to write about Dublin (then he got the knack and went to Zurich WW1, then Paris)....BBC4tv doc[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostYes - but isn't it interesting that so many had to go to Paris in order to be able to do so; as if they needed the distance in order to put into perspective which of the abundance of multi-cultural influences they needed in order to express this "authenticity"?
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI'm risking a lot of flak for what I am about to say, but, listening to a lot of that "authenticity" in the shape of "Billy the Kid", "Rodeo", Hanson's American-restyled Rachmaninov and even the symphonies of Harris, does tend to bring Soviet Socialist Realist music contemporary with it to mind: I guess by virtue of that particular form of populism being the accepted model at the time of the New Deal. Carter later acknowledged his involvement in that aesthetic in explaining the reasons why he felt he had to find a new direction for himself in the late '40s; and of course Copland did extend his interest into more advanced compositional methods including serialism in later years, though I often feel a certain strain to be detected in those later works, as though the composer was not really "at home" writing them. Outside the academic white adaptation of the European, we haven't really touched here on the American "Experimentalists", Ives apart, who perhaps expressed the "spirit of America" the most authentically? And the whole thing about jazz, Third Stream etc, adds a further dimension to this subject... of, er... impressionism in American music. Sorry, Lats...
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Originally posted by Lat-Literal View PostNo need to apologise......I just wonder, though, how far forward in time one needs to go before it isn't impressionism but, the word you use, work of experimentalists. On the points about Boulanger, yes, but when it comes to the South Americans I think there might be an argument for the principal influence being Copland, ie some cut the "middle woman" out.
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