Harrison Birtwistle (1934 - 2022)

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  • Pulcinella
    Host
    • Feb 2014
    • 10950

    #31
    Times obituary here:



    I'm unable to share a general article from the body of the paper, though.

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    • Mandryka
      Full Member
      • Feb 2021
      • 1537

      #32
      I listened to Punch and Judy last night, first time in many years. It’s an entertaining little opera I think, it has a plot I can follow more or less, at least in the first half, and it has some music which still sounds bold and fresh to me, and many memorable and hummable tunes and foot tappable rhythms. It seems to me to work pretty well with sound only, as well as any opera can, though I certainly wouldn’t mind going to a production.
      Last edited by Mandryka; 19-04-22, 08:32.

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      • gurnemanz
        Full Member
        • Nov 2010
        • 7389

        #33
        Just played his Silbury Air on a lovely sunny morning in Wiltshire. The hill in question is a few miles from where we live.

        RIP

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        • Quarky
          Full Member
          • Dec 2010
          • 2661

          #34
          Well, Silbury Air isn't exactly what I imagined it to be, Birtwistle having a more abstract view.

          Nevertheless, Birmingham Contemporary Music Group have put together some worksheets for students, which I found very enlightening as to Birtwistle's methods of composition::

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          • silvestrione
            Full Member
            • Jan 2011
            • 1708

            #35
            Originally posted by Mandryka View Post
            Maybe this is a good intro to his music, the film music for Sidney Lumet's"The Offence"

            Or there's the remarkable music he did for Tony Harrison's Oresteia, while at the National under Peter Hall:

            Peter Hall's 1983 staging of Tony Harrison's adaptation of Aeschylus' Oresteia, with Robert Fagle's introductory quotations.

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            • edashtav
              Full Member
              • Jul 2012
              • 3670

              #36
              Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
              One of my favourite composers, unusual-sounding as that may seem coming from the Romantic that is me. One of those composers whose idiom I never have quite worked out, but which has always made sense in some inexplicable way for me. […].
              One of my favourites, too. I first encountered Harri and his music, the rather atypical Refrains and Choruses, in the Barber Institute around 1966. Perhaps for the only time in his life, young Harri was ‘trendy’ as he sported a bootlace tie. I think I’ve hear more first performances of works by Birtwistle than by any other contemporary composer. I was there when the ISCM paid tribute to him in its Manchester Festival [the extended Pulse Shadows]. And my favourite piece is… Silbury Air.
              Last edited by edashtav; 20-04-22, 18:50.

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              • RichardB
                Banned
                • Nov 2021
                • 2170

                #37
                I'm very fond of Silbury Air too. But here

                Recorded live at Belgrade Philharmonic Hall on 12 November 2021.performed by:Snježana Pavićević, fluteSanja Romić, oboePredrag Nedeljković, clarinetNenad Jan...


                is another one I like, the seminal Tragoedia - this video has just been uploaded, it's from the first performance of the work in Serbia which took place last November (!).

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                • silvestrione
                  Full Member
                  • Jan 2011
                  • 1708

                  #38
                  Originally posted by RichardB View Post
                  I'm very fond of Silbury Air too. But here

                  Recorded live at Belgrade Philharmonic Hall on 12 November 2021.performed by:Snježana Pavićević, fluteSanja Romić, oboePredrag Nedeljković, clarinetNenad Jan...


                  is another one I like, the seminal Tragoedia - this video has just been uploaded, it's from the first performance of the work in Serbia which took place last November (!).
                  The Aarhus Sinfonietta can be heard in Ritual Fragment...his music has travelled!

                  Amongst the early works I prefer Verses for Ensembles -- it has an extraordinary part for timps and drums, the outbreaks interspersed with what i presume are the 'verses', passages for winds and brass. It's a Birtwistlian 'symphony of wind instruments'....slightly spiky and 'tough' I suppose, though with chorale-like passages, too.

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                  • Joseph K
                    Banned
                    • Oct 2017
                    • 7765

                    #39
                    Originally posted by silvestrione View Post
                    It's a Birtwistlian 'symphony of wind instruments'....slightly spiky and 'tough' I suppose, though with chorale-like passages, too.
                    ... That piece having the most influence on Birtwistle, I think.

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                    • silvestrione
                      Full Member
                      • Jan 2011
                      • 1708

                      #40
                      Originally posted by Joseph K View Post
                      ... That piece having the most influence on Birtwistle, I think.
                      Yes, well-documented, I believe.

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                      • ostuni
                        Full Member
                        • Nov 2010
                        • 550

                        #41
                        I was reminded today of what I think was the first piece of Birtwistle's that I heard live: the abrasively dramatic Down by the Greenwood Side at a marvellous Prom in 1972 which made a big impression on the 19-yr-old me (watching a snippet of a rehearsal on YouTube of a 2009 ROH Linbury Studio production just now, I was amazed at how well I remembered the piece).

                        Prom 38 included the Proms premieres of that piece, as well as of Weill's Mahagonny-Songspiel, Schoenberg's 1st Chamber Symphony (!), and Tavener's Celtic Requiem - and Stravinsky's Octet. A super line-up: Jenny Hill singing Mrs Green in the Birtwistle; Annie Ross, Cleo Laine, Gerald English, Robert Tear, Raymundo Herincx, Michael Rippon in the Weill, and (of course) the London Sinfonietta/Atherton.
                        Last edited by ostuni; 22-04-22, 13:30. Reason: Brain fog…

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                        • Lordgeous
                          Full Member
                          • Dec 2012
                          • 831

                          #42
                          Those were the days!

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                          • silvestrione
                            Full Member
                            • Jan 2011
                            • 1708

                            #43
                            Originally posted by ostuni View Post
                            I was reminded today of what I think was the first piece of Birtwistle's that I heard live: the abrasively dramatic Under the Greenwood Tree, at a marvellous Prom in 1972 which made a big impression on the 19-yr-old me (watching a snippet of a rehearsal on YouTube of a 2009 ROH Linbury Studio production just now, I was amazed at how well I remembered the piece).

                            Prom 38 included the Proms premieres of that piece, as well as of Weill's Mahagonny-Songspiel, Schoenberg's 1st Chamber Symphony (!), and Tavener's Celtic Requiem - and Stravinsky's Octet. A super line-up: Jenny Hill singing Mrs Green in the Birtwistle; Annie Ross, Cleo Laine, Gerald English, Robert Tear, Raymundo Herincx, Michael Rippon in the Weill, and (of course) the London Sinfonietta/Atherton.
                            'Down by the Greenwood Side'?

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                            • ostuni
                              Full Member
                              • Nov 2010
                              • 550

                              #44
                              Whoops - thanks! Editing…

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                              • RichardB
                                Banned
                                • Nov 2021
                                • 2170

                                #45
                                Originally posted by silvestrione View Post
                                Amongst the early works I prefer Verses for Ensembles
                                I like that one very much too, although it suffers a bit in live performance from the distraction of having musicians walk around to different places while others are continuing to play, which is something I've never liked, mainly because musicians are never trained (like actors would be) to know the most elegant and unobtrusive way to do something like that, so they tend to do it somewhat clumsily and selfconsciously. In any case I would prefer to concentrate on the sounds.

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