Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte
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Sentimental - Beautiful - Kitsch
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostYes that's right - I think there was a lot of fatalism wrapped up in Romanticism - presumably a hangover from religion's idea that perfection was a worthy objective but unrealisable in "this" life. Hence Tristan & Isolde! But I've always assumed that the love of Nature, and idealised ways in which the Romantic poets portrayed love, sexual union especially, as re-connecctive with the natural, was at odds with the pessimism. Maybe insofar as the Romantics hung onto some religious belief in transcendence as inhering more in human imperfection than in the limitations of the descriptive? I don't know...
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A lot depends on which "Romantics" we're talking about, dovers - the connection with Nature that Wordsworth describes in The Prelude shows that there was never any any severence that needed "reconnecting". And, as for John Clare ...
(And I suspect that the "Chain of Being" that forms the structure of Mahler's Third Symphony goes deeper than a subjective experience of an individual's "pleasure".)[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostA lot depends on which "Romantics" we're talking about, dovers - the connection with Nature that Wordsworth describes in The Prelude shows that there was never any any severence that needed "reconnecting". And, as for John Clare ...
(And I suspect that the "Chain of Being" that forms the structure of Mahler's Third Symphony goes deeper than a subjective experience of an individual's "pleasure".)
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostHere is a (translated) passage from a quintessentially Romantic poem, "Heimkehr" by Heinrich Heine.
By the old grey tower
a sentry-box stands;
….
I wish he would shoot me dead.
Originally posted by Judith Robbyns View PostYou seemed to be querying what was "wrong" with music that was "sentimental". I was simply saying that the word, as now used, meant over sentimental so that was what was "wrong". If you had defined the word, as you meant it to be understood, your rather general comment would have been easier to reply to. I have never heard the word "kitsch" used to describe music. Just rather quirky, not very valuable, collectibles which are characteristic of objects which appeal to a taste for the individual and perhaps rather amusing. Toby jugs, for instance. Or garden gnomes. De gustibus.
I think you're right, kitsch has perhaps not been used to describe music. I may be getting mixed up there. Other words are used but the same meaning is behind them. I believe muzack is one of them, sentimental rubbish is another.
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostIndeed. I was just making the point that calling the Romantic period the "Happiness period" is to miss at least half of the character of it.
Originally posted by ahinton View PostGiven its commercial success, perhaps its "composer"'s name, Add 'n' sell, was also in bad taste ….
The point I am trying to make is why is such excellent music being poo pooed? It's the same with picture painting. Anything that is absolutely astoundingly gorgeous is trashed as being shallow. For instance, such high standard artwork as this:- https://www.dazeddigital.com/artsand...antasy-forever would never be considered to be of much value in the world of art, can you imagine it winning the Turner prize? But yet it is of such staggeringly high quality. Whereas work like this:- https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-14149880 can go for tens of thousands of pounds.
I'm not saying the Kyffin Williams' art is rubbish (although I think it alright it doesn't do much for me), but for it to go for such prices and the fantasy art to be considered kitsch! I mean, I just don't get it. It's the same with music. It's a topsy turvey world. I very often dissagree with the general public but on this I am with them. Rachmaninov's 2nd Symphony and Adinsell's Warsaw Concerto ROCK! They are not over sentimental rubbish. They are top quality sentimental perfection.
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Originally posted by NatBalance View PostThe point I am trying to make is why is such excellent music being poo pooed?
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Originally posted by NatBalance View PostRachmaninov's 2nd Symphony and Adinsell's Warsaw Concerto ROCK! They are not over sentimental rubbish. They are top quality sentimental perfection.Last edited by ahinton; 27-10-19, 17:56.
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Judith Robbyns
NatBalance: "Yes I was asking what is wrong with sentimental? The fact that it is now taken as meaning over sentimental, well, not sure how to answer that. I hadn't really realised that when I started this thread. That is something for the people who take it that way to sort out for themselves."
All these movements evolve, often starting as a reaction (even a 'corrective') to a previous movement, then the special characteristics are seen to become over emphasised and a new reaction/corrective follows. So the 'sentimental' was a reaction to the intellectual values of the Enlightenment, and newly centred on individuals and their feelings. The whole Romantic movement was also concerned with feelings/emotions, but was much more complex and intense in its concerns, Nature, Life, Death, Destiny … The purely sentimental seemed simplistic in comparison. Rachmaninoff was part of late Romanticism. Addinsell is less valued because he deliberately tried to imitate (seldom a good idea artistically) Rachmaninoff, harking back to a previous age musically. It was written-to-order film music (and not in any real sense a 'concerto'). In the context of the film it was very effective in capturing the essence and atmosphere of the film's story. And that is the way it may be admired and considered a success, but not as a Romantic concerto to compare with Rachmaninoff.
Also think of the way the word 'romantic' has been devalued, depending on the context: cheap romantic fiction, True Romance. It's what happens artistically when the aim is to capture the attention and approval of the mass audience; and make money. All in my view.
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Originally posted by Judith Robbyns View Posthe deliberately tried to imitate (seldom a good idea artistically) Rachmaninoff, harking back to a previous age musically
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI for example look for music (and visual art etc.) to expand my view of what music can do, rather than to reinforce something I already know it can do, and to bring about a state of mind where emotional and intellectual responses become indistinguishable from one another.
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThere are no objective standards for what counts as "staggeringly high quality" in music or art. Nor should there be.
Ahinton - in reply to my statement "Rachmaninov's 2nd Symphony and Adinsell's Warsaw Concerto ROCK! They are not over sentimental rubbish. They are top quality sentimental perfection."
Originally posted by ahinton View PostWriting of these two works in the same sentence is about as convincing an example as any of the notion that comparisons are odious. Addinsell / Douglas' Warsaw Concerto's substance, such as it is, pretends at best to imitate certain models by presenting the sketchiest of outlines of the contents of a Romantic piano concerto on a sufficiently small scale so that its listeners have as little as possible on which to concentrate; its structure, insofar as it has one, is as creaky as could be.
Addinsell/ Douglas's work does not pretend to imitate a certain model, it was openly commissioned to imitate Rachmaninov's style, being as he would not allow his music to be used, and an expert job they did too.
Originally posted by Judith Robbyns View PostAddinsell is less valued because he deliberately tried to imitate (seldom a good idea artistically) Rachmaninoff ….
Originally posted by ahinton View PostThat said, each serves its avowed purpose well, the one as an empty piece of Dangerous Moonshine that one might almost think of as an Accompaniment to a NON-imaginary filom sceneand the other a finely formed through-composed contribution to the Russian symphonic canon with an intellectual and emotional thrust whose scope dwarfs that of the Addinsell / Douglas work.
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I suppose the point is that quality of art is entirely objective. I often wonder how they mark work in art education. They could mark something down and that certain something could later become 'the thing'.
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Originally posted by NatBalance View PostAhinton - in reply to my statement "Rachmaninov's 2nd Symphony and Adinsell's Warsaw Concerto ROCK! They are not over sentimental rubbish. They are top quality sentimental perfection."
I wasn't really comparing them, I was just saying they are both superb pieces of music. I've never understood criticism of structure of music. It seems to me a bit like criticising the shape of a piece of chocolate. It's not that significant a feature, it's the taste that really counts, unless of course you go to extremes e.g. the chocolate is shaped like something disgusting, or the piece of music has too many repeats (or not enough perhaps). I've read that the structure of Chopin's piano concertos is weak. I'd be interested to hear how they would sound if their structure was strong. How would it improve them?
Originally posted by NatBalance View PostAddinsell/ Douglas's work does not pretend to imitate a certain model, it was openly commissioned to imitate Rachmaninov's style, being as he would not allow his music to be used, and an expert job they did too.
Originally posted by NatBalance View PostThis does not affect the quality of the music though. As you say this is a judgement on the composer. He (or they) were asked to copy Rachmaninov's style, and they did a high class job of it.
Originally posted by NatBalance View PostThis can be compared to Colin Matthews' attempt at copying Holst's style when composing Pluto as a follow on piece to The Planets. In my opinion Addinsell / Douglas did a much better job in copying Rachmanivov's style than Matthews did in copying Holst's (a good attempt but he didn't really crack it, a more difficult task probably aswell).
Originally posted by NatBalance View PostBlimey …. empty? Of course the longer piece of music's scope by its very nature dwarfs the shorter, but by heck, the Warsaw Concerto does one hell of a lot with the short time it's got.
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Originally posted by NatBalance View Post
I've never understood criticism of structure of music. It seems to me a bit like criticising the shape of a piece of chocolate. It's not that significant a feature, it's the taste that really counts, unless of course you go to extremes e.g. the chocolate is shaped like something disgusting, or the piece of music has too many repeats (or not enough perhaps).
If the composer is allowed or encouraged to be self-critical in how he or she builds his or her structures, why can't we be equally critical of the results in that same spirit of encouragement or questioning? Or are we too thick to be capable of perceiving the work in its inner workings, and to be moved (or not) by how the moving parts together add up to the whole? Manufactured chocolate on the other hand is a much more recent invention!
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Originally posted by NatBalance View PostI've never understood criticism of structure of music. It seems to me a bit like criticising the shape of a piece of chocolate. It's not that significant a feature
Colin Matthews wasn't attempting to copy Holst's style. He spoke of "the challenge of trying to write a new movement for The Planets without attempting to impersonate Holst". That seems quite clear.Last edited by Richard Barrett; 29-10-19, 23:22.
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