Originally posted by Boilk
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Unheard British symphonies
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostAs I may have mentioned before, I was responsible for producing at least some of the performing materials for that piece. It was a soul-destroying task I have to say.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostIn what way? Can you elaborate on that? I have vague recollections of it sounding rather better than some other things of his that I'd heard but have to admit that the subsequent passage of (rather a lot of) time has dimmed the memory of it pretty much to extinction. What possessed him to write 116 symphonies I have no more idea than I have of how he managed to commit so very much music (391 numbered works) to paper over less than six decades...
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostShould be popular in oilfields, though.
This is a perennial topic on the Forum. There are some very good works amongst those mentioned so far (those by Alwyn were a real discovery for me - my thanks yet again to Edgey and Andrew Slater) and they do get occasional broadcasts (I can remember Alwyn, Arnold, Jones, Bax having had works broadcast on R3 over the past 5 years) and there is the annual Malcolm Arnold Festival.
It's just that most of them are simply not interesting enough for a sufficient number of conductors to want to learn them and then train orchestras to play them more regularly. There are far too many other works that they want to devote their energies to. (And that's just broadcast performances - add the large indifference of audiences to the mix, and you see why they aren't programmed in concerts more often.)
We'll have to make do with the Lyrita, Naxos, Dutton recordings and those "odd outings" on R3.
There is, I am quite sure, an unjustified bias against British Composers of the C20 among the programmers at top level arts organisations.
And I'm never sure about the "audience indifference" claims , either for unheard British composers, or more left field recent music. It seems to me to be part of a defensive narrative, in a risk averse environment. There are plenty of examples of poor turnouts for core rep concerts, and surprisingly big audiences for less often heard works .Ligeti and Takemitsu at the RAH springs to mind.
What is needed is leadership and imaginative programming.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostHowever, there is an obligation on those who have roles with influence ( and are usually have their jobs part funded by public funds) to take a lead.
There may well be bias ("unjustified" or not) against C20th British composers - but it's not just "among the programmers at top level organisations" - how many solo pianists feel so committed to this repertoire that they offer it on theor programmes to the small Music Clubs/Concert Societies around the country?
Unless you get performers keen - that's the key word - keen to perform any repertoire, it simply won't get performed. There's quite a bit of good Music from these composers, but it doesn't excite enough performers to get the number of performances that its admirers will ever think it warrants. There's just too much better stuff from elsewhere (and elsewhen) that performers are more keen to promote - like Ligeti and Tekemitsu.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostBut "take a lead" in what? Forcing conductors to learn repertoire with which they feel no sympathy? How would that affect the level of commitment to the job in hand - would a decent, professional run-through of a work do it any favours?
There may well be bias ("unjustified" or not) against C20th British composers - but it's not just "among the programmers at top level organisations" - how many solo pianists feel so committed to this repertoire that they offer it on theor programmes to the small Music Clubs/Concert Societies around the country?
Unless you get performers keen - that's the key word - keen to perform any repertoire, it simply won't get performed. There's quite a bit of good Music from these composers, but it doesn't excite enough performers to get the number of performances that its admirers will ever think it warrants. There's just too much better stuff from elsewhere (and elsewhen) that performers are more keen to promote - like Ligeti and Tekemitsu.
There must be an element of chicken and egg. Conductors and orchestras have time pressure, and also the requirement to keep core rep performances excellent, but programme directors ought to have time to take an imaginative lead in their discussions with the performers. And it concerns me that for financial and career reasons they are often too risk averse.
And actually my suspicion is that many conductors would like to range wider, and would be keen to do so, and know of music they would like to cover, but are too often constrained by external pressures. as a contrast with imagination . It can be done, and there are people doing it well for example the Britten Sinfonia.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Back in the day ….
The following concert (not recordings) was broadcast on 30th January 1975 as part of an ongoing series called 'Orpheus Britannicus':
MacCunn: The Land Of The Mountain And The Flood
Maxwell Geddes: Portrait Of A City
Ian Whyte: Tone Poem - Edinburgh
Martin Dalby: Symphony No. 1
CoTW is a welcome exception to the overall dearth of programmes - or even items within programmes - to feature British symphonies.
I believe the Havergal Brian season was broadcast in the late 1970s.
As somebody else has said, thank heavens for Naxos, Lyrita and certain other labels.Last edited by LMcD; 14-08-19, 04:50.
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostBack in the day ….
The following concert (not recordings) was broadcast on 30th January 1975 as part of an ongoing series called 'Orpheus Britannicus':
MacCunn: The Land Of The Mountain And The Flood
Maxwell Geddes: Portrait Of A City
Ian Whyte: Tone Poem - Edinburgh
Martin Dalby: Symphony No. 1
CoTW is a welcome exception to the overall dearth of programmes - or even items within programmes - to feature British symphonies.
I believe the Havergal Brian season was broadcast in the late 1970s.
As somebody else has said, thank heavens for Naxos, Lyrita and certain other labels.
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Originally posted by Alison View PostIf you want a wine symphony preference would be for Havergal Brian’s Fifth. ‘Wine of Summer’.
I love following these works assisted by the Calum McDonald books.
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