Originally posted by Heldenleben
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The 2020 Survey of Classical Music on Radio 3
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Originally posted by Keraulophone View Post#64 - Still, W G - the highest ranked composer I’d never heard of.
Well done Mr Still: William Grant Still Jr., 11/5/1895 – 3/12/1978. 5 symphonies, 9 operas, nearly 200 works in all. A remarkable story.
Not to be confused with the Eton Still, Robert: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Still
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostI only know a few of John White's 25 Symphonies. Of those I am familiar with, none is over 10 minutes long. Earlier symphonies of similar duration are to be found among those of G B Sammartini.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostComposer of the Week during 2019 and again a few months ago: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0002cbc
Not to be confused with the Eton Still, Robert: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Still
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Curious the number of composers who only managed one single broadcast. I'd have thought if they deserved airtime at all, they deserved more than one outing in 10 years. I see even old smittims' favourite, Bernard van Dieren, only had a single outing. And Rawsthorne only one?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Suffolkcoastal View PostRawsthorne is certainly one composer who has largely been ignored in recent years by R3. A total of 31 pieces/chunks in the last 12 years, and a majority of these being film scores.
No 1
No 2 A Pastoral Symphony
No 3It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Rawsthorne was one of that post-Vaughan Williams generation who fell to some extent under the influence of Hindemith - Arnold Cooke, Franz Reisenstein, Walton and, yes, even Tippett were, likewise. For English composers (especially) unwilling to go the whole hog down the Second Viennese School route to 12-tonery Hindemith represented one way of re-establishing a leading principle for tonality as a kind of safety net. As such the music of these part-heirs was as modernistically "safe" as a 1930s semi in Liverpool, Birmingham or Romford to an apologist for Voysey, not in the least ways entertaining of the "excitement" elicited by the postwar arts as represented by Hepworth or, dare I say, Britten (when Lutyens (composer, not architect!) or Searle (composer, not cartoonist!) would have provided a better comparator to Hemel Hempstead or Harlow New Town. These are some of the reasons why the likes of Rawsthorne and, before him, Hindemith were and remain relatively ignored. And not, by the way, due to Rawsthorne's Communist sympathies: how would you recognise those amid the upright "Britishness" of "Street Corner", which represented his most public face? For some he would have been to respectable, too old-fashioned, a compromiser; for others too modern. All considerations condemned to the sweeper in the 1960s.
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Originally posted by Leinster Lass View PostI have 7 CDs devoted solely to music by Rawsthorne and others on which he features. I think the Cello Concerto is a particularly fine work. I wonder how many people know that there's more than one Pastoral Symphony?
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Originally posted by Leinster Lass View PostI have 7 CDs devoted solely to music by Rawsthorne and others on which he features. I think the Cello Concerto is a particularly fine work. I wonder how many people know that there's more than one Pastoral Symphony?Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 05-01-21, 19:33.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostRawsthorne was one of that post-Vaughan Williams generation who fell to some extent under the influence of Hindemith - Arnold Cooke, Franz Reisenstein, Walton and, yes, even Tippett were, likewise. For English composers (especially) unwilling to go the whole hog down the Second Viennese School route to 12-tonery Hindemith represented one way of re-establishing a leading principle for tonality as a kind of safety net. As such the music of these part-heirs was as modernistically "safe" as a 1930s semi in Liverpool, Birmingham or Romford to an apologist for Voysey, not in the least ways entertaining of the "excitement" elicited by the postwar arts as represented by Hepworth or, dare I say, Britten (when Lutyens (composer, not architect!) or Searle (composer, not cartoonist!) would have provided a better comparator to Hemel Hempstead or Harlow New Town. These are some of the reasons why the likes of Rawsthorne and, before him, Hindemith were and remain relatively ignored. And not, by the way, due to Rawsthorne's Communist sympathies: how would you recognise those amid the upright "Britishness" of "Street Corner", which represented his most public face? For some he would have been to respectable, too old-fashioned, a compromiser; for others too modern. All considerations condemned to the sweeper in the 1960s.
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Originally posted by Leinster Lass View PostI have 7 CDs devoted solely to music by Rawsthorne and others on which he features. I think the Cello Concerto is a particularly fine work. I wonder how many people know that there's more than one Pastoral Symphony?
“Music is the best means we have of digesting time." — Igor Stravinsky
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