There are certain works with which, despite repeated efforts over time, I continue to struggle. This week I thought I'd try - yet again - to get to grips with Bartok's string quartets, which are featuring in the Lunchtime Concerts, but I don't think the light bulb is going to be switched on. I don't have a problem with Bartok, or with string quartets, generally. I would be interested in learning of other people's heroic but doomed efforts to develop an understanding, or at least a liking, of particular musical works. Tips on how to approach the Bartok quartets will be given due consideration
I've REALLY, REALLY tried, but ......
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostThere are certain works with which, despite repeated efforts over time, I continue to struggle. This week I thought I'd try - yet again - to get to grips with Bartok's string quartets, which are featuring in the Lunchtime Concerts, but I don't think the light bulb is going to be switched on. I don't have a problem with Bartok, or with string quartets, generally. I would be interested in learning of other people's heroic but doomed efforts to develop an understanding, or at least a liking, of particular musical works. Tips on how to approach the Bartok quartets will be given due consideration
Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostInterestingly (to me ) I was put off Copland largely by repeats of rodeo and some other Copland war-horses and told a friend that try as I might I can't get into Copland. Then I heard his charming story about the titling of Appalachian Spring: somehow this turned a switch somewhere inside and I've been able to hear his music anew (though more work needed ).
The story is that while working on the music, he always referred to it as 'New Martha Graham Ballet'. He only learned the Appalachian Spring name (IIRC) once the music was completed. He preceded this bit of the story with anecodtes of fans saying, 'Mr Copland, when I hear this piece I can positively smell the Appalachian woods in springtime'....
Not long after my brother, then at University, had introduced me to classical music by buying me an LP of two Rossini overtures for my - I think - fourteenth birthday, he began to buy other LPs mainly for himself, but I listened to them all. I must have been 15-16 when he bought the Bartok 5th and 6th quartets. To me this sound-world was nothing like the worlds of Mozart, Haydn, Brahms and so forth that I was beginning to get to know. Yet something of the fifth quartet in particular grew on me and spoke to me directly - even at that tender and musically inexperienced age. I haven't heard either of them in decades. But perhaps a naive, 'innocent ear' approach might work? Good luck!
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostBut perhaps a naive, 'innocent ear' approach might work? Good luck!
and repeat the exercise, and eventually you may decide to listen to one of the quartets in its entirety.
I hope you DO find your hoped-for appreciation of Bartok's SQs. Let us know your progress....
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Originally posted by visualnickmos View PostThat's a very good approach. Maybe just pick a single movement at random, from any of the quartets, and listen to it as a musical 'experience'....
and repeat the exercise, and eventually you may decide to listen to one of the quartets in its entirety.
I hope you DO find your hoped-for appreciation of Bartok's SQs. Let us know your progress....
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostThere are certain works with which, despite repeated efforts over time, I continue to struggle. This week I thought I'd try - yet again - to get to grips with Bartok's string quartets, which are featuring in the Lunchtime Concerts, but I don't think the light bulb is going to be switched on. I don't have a problem with Bartok, or with string quartets, generally. I would be interested in learning of other people's heroic but doomed efforts to develop an understanding, or at least a liking, of particular musical works. Tips on how to approach the Bartok quartets will be given due consideration
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View Post. . . those wonderful Saga LPs . . .
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Originally posted by Vespare View PostTry Beethoven late quartets + folksy influences/ rhythms? That worked for me as a young man, and I didn't have a problem with his quartets. I was strongly into Jazz at the time, which helped to open the mind.
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Originally posted by Bryn View Post
Hope that's a hint to LMcD: already part of my collection.
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostI find the late Beethoven quartets difficult and challenging BUT I've never yet failed to listen all the way through, and I will listen to them again because I want to, and believe I will, understand more each time and thus derive more enjoyment from listening to them. I find the Bartok quartets rather forbidding, and, despite my best efforts, I derive no pleasure whatever from listening to then and my mind wanders after a while.
I had it as a separate publication, but gave it away to a friend when I discovered it was reprinted in the full study score set.
(I now fully expect you to turn the tables on me and get me to do some homework on the late Beethoven! )
PS: Cheaper from Presto, and here's the full set study score too:
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostIf you are prepared to investigate further, this little monograph by Matyas Seiber might give some pointers:
I had it as a separate publication, but gave it away to a friend when I discovered it was reprinted in the full study score set.
This second quartet pretty well establishes the language that prevails in all the remaining quartets, although in Nos 3 and 4, in particular, the working out has become subject to more extreme compressions and condensation. No 5 represents the biggest expansion of the means developed in 3 and 4, along with advances in instrumental technique and timbral possibilities one can find outlined in any good liner notes, and No 6 something of a look back via a résumé of all the foregoing advances in the light of homesickness, despair at the prospect of war, and failing health.
Another way to go through the quartets, if you have time and availability of recordings, is to infill by playing the intervening works, such as the opera Bluebeard's Castle, The Miraculous Mandarin ballet music, the Dance Suite of 1923, the two violin and piano sonatas of the year before, the Music for Strings, Harp, Celesta and Percussion of 1936, the numerous folk settings from straightforward to wonderfully complex and penetrating, such as the Improvisations on Peasant Songs of 1920 - the latter of which brings me to the magnificent piano output, starting with the amazing Bagatelles of 1908, some of which are as harmonically advanced as the contemporaneous Schoenberg Op 11: Bartók was a virtuoso pianist, and his oeuvre is as representive and as revealing of his creative intelligence as a composer as the string quartets, with which they can profitably be compared in examining differences and commonalities in approach etc.
There's probably much more I could add and bore you with, but I hope this helps in your quest.
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Coincidentally, my undergraduate dissertation, written in my callow youth, was a comparative structural and compositional analysis of the Bartok and late Beethoven quartets. My external examiner opened my viva voce exam with the comment that he had read my thesis "with great interest" and then proceeded to ask me numerous questions on Stravinsky! I was awarded a mark I was well pleased with, and after the degree results were posted, the external admitted to me that he had not read a single word of my work...
EDIT: However, my first exposure to Bartok's quartets (the start of the opening movement of the 4th), at the age of 15 and during a school music lesson, made me burst out laughing in disbelief!Last edited by Tapiola; 17-10-19, 15:56.
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