Radio 4 has a James MacMillan series on the subject. Some of his guests are quite lucid. I'm afraid 'talking over music' isn't a format I find agreeable. For instance, today I turned the programme off and gave my favourite LP of John Shirley Quirk and VW's Mystical Songs a spin.
Faith in Music, anyone?
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostRadio 4 has a James MacMillan series on the subject. Some of his guests are quite lucid. I'm afraid 'talking over music' isn't a format I find agreeable. For instance, today I turned the programme off and gave my favourite LP of John Shirley Quirk and VW's Mystical Songs a spin.
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I'd be very interested to know if anyone's explored Jonathan Harvey's music. I have a bit, with mixed feelings, I must say. However this sticks in my mind as being a bit special, and I guess may be relevant to the topic at hand
The composer's note may help make it clear what's happening
The Goethe poem Wanderers Nachtlied is familiar to musicians in Schubert's sublime 1822 setting. Goethe wrote it sitting under an oak or, in another account, in a hut on a hill outside Weimar which was subsequently to become the site of Buchenwald. The designers of the concentration camp reverently preserved the site. It Is one of the most eerie places I have ever visited. From many years before that visit I could not disassociate the Schubert evocation of peace - written at the beginning of the nineteenth century - with a meditation on death. Only the visit seemed to explain what had unaccountably haunted my mind for so many years. The mystical poems of Steiner are answers to the fear and negativity of death, touching as they do on the light-filled colours of the 'next' world. According to Steiner we visit the luminous life-giving region nightly in deep sleep. The first meditation picks up the theme of rest from the Goethe poem and describes the soul’s night-journey to a light-filled cosmic ocean. The second meditation describes the journey back at dawn.
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I knew Jonathan Harvey, though not well, and his music a bit better. For me his music divides into those pieces where the "spiritual" dimension is uppermost, which tend to be somewhat weaker musically, and those where the sound seems more likely to have come first, which are the ones I prefer. I don't know Mythic Figures though.
Originally posted by Mandryka View PostI also have a question for the Stockhausen heads, something which has puzzled me for a while about him. Gesang der Jünglinge is a "setting" (in some sense) of words from the Bible. Did he think of it as a spiritual, even a Christian, piece? I just saw the wiki on it says he was thinking of writing a mass at the time. Is there a way into the music (you know what I mean, a hermeneutical approach) from that religious point of view.
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Originally posted by Mandryka View PostI'd be very interested to know if anyone's explored Jonathan Harvey's music. I have a bit, with mixed feelings, I must say. However this sticks in my mind as being a bit special, and I guess may be relevant to the topic at hand
The composer's note may help make it clear what's happening
I also have a question for the Stockhausen heads, something which has puzzled me for a while about him. Gesang der Jünglinge is a "setting" (in some sense) of words from the Bible. Did he think of it as a spiritual, even a Christian, piece? I just saw the wiki on it says he was thinking of writing a mass at the time. Is there a way into the music (you know what I mean, a hermeneutical approach) from that religious point of view.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostIn a radio lecture I taped Stockhausen said somewhat lightheartedly to audience amusement that he had identified with the characters trapped in the fiery furnace, considering himself to be one of them through the critical reputation he had been getting at the time of composition!
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