Richard Rodney Bennett???
Unheard British symphonies
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Originally posted by Lordgeous View PostRichard Rodney Bennett???
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostYes, but does a Catalan composer strictly count as British, even though constrained to escape Spain to France and then to settle in Cambridge? Surely his cultural grounding was very much Catalan?
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostTrue - a piano pupil of Granados in his youth, at that - but this opens up a whole barrel of worms unless one disqualifies certain composers (including Gerhard) as "British" solely on the grounds that they were not born in Britain like Handel, Delius, van Dieren as distinct from, say, Holst but settled in Britain...
While at it, in connection, I found this among my book shelves:
"One characteristic of the English genius is its capacity to absorb foreign influences, whether artistic or political, into its own system and to convert foreign settlers into Englishmen. Handel is the classic instance in music. Delius is another and the names of Holst and Finzi, the second English to the core, indicate how, after a generation or two, alien blood has been absorbed. The same process is evident not only in the case of Seiber, but even in a more mature musician like Egon Wellesz, who has composed an English comic opera, Incognito, based on a story by Congreve and a number of settings of English poetry, and in Franz Reizenstein, a pupil of Hindemith, who came to England in 1934 at the age of twenty-three. Reizenstein's cantata, Voices in the Night (1951), is a remarkable witness to his sensitive response to English poetic imagery and metres - the text is an anthology ranging from Campian and Charles Corton to Christopher Hassall who arranged it - and to his ability to compose in the great tradition of English choral music without losing his own individuality ...". (Music in Great Britain after 1945[/I], Dyneley Hussey, in Twentieth Century Music: A symposium (1960), Ed. Rollo Myers. John Calder, London, P.189).
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostFranz Reizenstein, a pupil of Hindemith, who came to England in 1934 at the age of twenty-three. Reizenstein's cantata, Voices in the Night (1951), is a remarkable witness to his sensitive response to English poetic imagery and metres
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... I've always thought that our Fritz Theodor, Dutch Westphalian tho' he surely was, was really more American/French than anything.
Typical Yorkshireman.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Maclintick View Post...as are his sublime "Variations on The Lambeth Walk"...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Q9FJSh3RSY
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostAdmittedly the first two, which I got to know in the late '60s, proved one of my stepping stones into the world of 12-tone and atonal music more generally, rather undermining my spartan advocacy of jumping straightaway into the deep end, but like quite a lot of RRB's serial music - especially after the promise of such early works as the Calendar, and Aubade of 1964, they now ironically seem too obviously formulaic - something that never occurs to me when listening to Goehr's two. I still nevertheless get annoyed at the public apology he made for using a 12-tone row as the basis for much of the Third, while self-exculpating over the claim of the "magic" resolution at its conclusion - if that was the word he used in a radio interview - when the foregoing music was imv some of his warmest and best using the method.
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