Originally posted by Serial_Apologist
View Post
Variation forms
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by rauschwerk View PostI greatly prefer the dodecaphonic music of Schoenberg's pupil Roberto Gerhard.
Comment
-
-
Passacaglia alla St Pancras Concours:
https://lnk.to/AndreiPiano!!!UPDATE: I have remastered the audio and uploaded a new clip. Click here to watch it: https://youtu.be/FI6AUaM_RoUAmazing piano c...
Sadly my nearest community piano (the one at Herne Hill station) has now been on lockdown since the beginning of the Covid outbreak. I would always have a wee tinkle on my way to or from Brixton.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostPassacaglia alla St Pancras Concours:
https://lnk.to/AndreiPiano!!!UPDATE: I have remastered the audio and uploaded a new clip. Click here to watch it: https://youtu.be/FI6AUaM_RoUAmazing piano c...
Sadly my nearest community piano (the one at Herne Hill station) has now been on lockdown since the beginning of the Covid outbreak. I would always have a wee tinkle on my way to or from Brixton.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by gradus View PostDo contemporary composers write passacaglias? Just listened to a fabulous performance of Bach's C minor Passacaglia and Fugue - so thrilling - played on COTW and this thread seemed the place to ask.
Comment
-
-
"I don't follow the fashion in which the variations have about as much in common with the theme as the moon has with a pickled herring."
So said Camille Saint-Saens. I do myself like to spot, even if not instantly, links between a theme and the variations that follow but sometimes I'm quite stumped. Case in point: Britten's Frank Bridge set. I have heard this piece many times over the years, but even after hearing an episode of Discovering Music in the hope of finding out how the piece 'works' I was none the wiser! As for the Schoenberg Op.31 set, I suppose it would help if I memorised and analysed the theme, but even then I'm not sure.
What are the views of boarders on this issue?
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by rauschwerk View Post"I don't follow the fashion in which the variations have about as much in common with the theme as the moon has with a pickled herring."
So said Camille Saint-Saens. I do myself like to spot, even if not instantly, links between a theme and the variations that follow but sometimes I'm quite stumped. Case in point: Britten's Frank Bridge set. I have heard this piece many times over the years, but even after hearing an episode of Discovering Music in the hope of finding out how the piece 'works' I was none the wiser! As for the Schoenberg Op.31 set, I suppose it would help if I memorised and analysed the theme, but even then I'm not sure.
What are the views of boarders on this issue?
I wouldn't worry too much if you can't always hear the theme against its variants, but its never a bad idea to familiarise yourself with the theme....... remember too, that these and other great Variations tend to create a more symphonic overall design, a through-composed structure....
Some works are indeed "Symphonic Variations" (cf Brahms 4 or Beethoven 9th finales) without actually being called that....Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 25-10-21, 13:17.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by rauschwerk View Post"I don't follow the fashion in which the variations have about as much in common with the theme as the moon has with a pickled herring."
So said Camille Saint-Saens. I do myself like to spot, even if not instantly, links between a theme and the variations that follow but sometimes I'm quite stumped. Case in point: Britten's Frank Bridge set. I have heard this piece many times over the years, but even after hearing an episode of Discovering Music in the hope of finding out how the piece 'works' I was none the wiser! As for the Schoenberg Op.31 set, I suppose it would help if I memorised and analysed the theme, but even then I'm not sure.
What are the views of boarders on this issue?
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by rauschwerk View Post"I don't follow the fashion in which the variations have about as much in common with the theme as the moon has with a pickled herring."
So said Camille Saint-Saens. I do myself like to spot, even if not instantly, links between a theme and the variations that follow but sometimes I'm quite stumped. Case in point: Britten's Frank Bridge set. I have heard this piece many times over the years, but even after hearing an episode of Discovering Music in the hope of finding out how the piece 'works' I was none the wiser! As for the Schoenberg Op.31 set, I suppose it would help if I memorised and analysed the theme, but even then I'm not sure.
What are the views of boarders on this issue?
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostWell, those are two of the greatest Variations ever composed, (as is the whole of Schmidt's 2nd Symphony - the ne plus ultra of Variations, an incredible tour-de-force on one theme; the Frankfurt/P-Jarvi cycle is the Gramophone Orchestral Award Winner 2021)...
I wouldn't worry too much if you can't always hear the theme against its variants, but its never a bad idea to familiarise yourself with the theme....... remember too, that these and other great Variations tend to create a more symphonic overall design, a through-composed structure....
Some works are indeed "Symphonic Variations" (cf Brahms 4 or Beethoven 9th finales) without actually being called that....
Comment
-
Comment