While I've long admired and enjoyed many of the later compositions of, for example, Britten and Shostakovich, I still struggle with quite a lot of 'classical' music composed after, say, 1945. This is doubtless due at least in part to the fact that I'm not musically trained and don't always know what to listen out for. However, certain works and composers strike a chord (boom! boom!) on first hearing and I return to them, and investigate further, in the hope of increasing both my enjoyment and understanding. I'm not sure what, if anything, these composers and their works have in common, but they include Alun Hoddinott, William Mathias and Peter Sculthorpe, who have now been joined by Robert Saxton, whose Concerto for Orchestra I've just heard for the first time. It manages to create a sound world which I find both thrilling and fascinating. Yet other composers - Boulez and Birtwistle for example - make no impression at all.
I shall persevere in the hope that the light becomes stronger!
I shall persevere in the hope that the light becomes stronger!
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