Originally posted by RichardB
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Harrison Birtwistle (1934 - 2022)
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostI seem to recall that there something similar in Thea Musgrave's clarinet concerto and Colin Matthews' horn concerto; I must confess that I also have doubts about it in practice...
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostI seem to recall that there something similar in Thea Musgrave's clarinet concerto and Colin Matthews' horn concerto; I must confess that I also have doubts about it in practice...
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TBuckley
Originally posted by BoilkSpecial Birtwistle tribute edition of the New Music Show this evening:
Tom Service pays tribute to Sir Harrison Birtwistle with a selection from the composer's vast output that encompasses opera, orchestral music, chamber and ensemble works. From the earliest opera Punch and Judy to the monumental and dramatic Earth Dances, and recent works including The Moth Requiem and Duet for Eight Strings, in recordings by some of the artists and ensembles closely associated with the composer.
Unsurprisingly, there seems to be nothing in the TV schedules. They could easily find room, about an hour, for this program centred on Birtwistle's Triumph of Time from 1999:
I recently watched my off-air recording and it really is a superb programme - the sort of thing the BBC used to do well, and maybe still can.
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The video recording of The Minotaur is well worth a look. It's a straightforward narrative, linear. The music calls Elektra to mind in the first half, in that it's visceral, tuneful. It has started to make me think about Birtwistle's relationship to past musics, the tradition.
Let me recommend The Minotaur, it works well in the DVD and is very easy, accessible from the point of structure and musical style.
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Originally posted by Mandryka View PostThe video recording of The Minotaur is well worth a look. It's a straightforward narrative, linear. The music calls Elektra to mind in the first half, in that it's visceral, tuneful. It has started to make me think about Birtwistle's relationship to past musics, the tradition.
Let me recommend The Minotaur, it works well in the DVD and is very easy, accessible from the point of structure and musical style.
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Some considerable time ago, I mean 30 years at least, there was an interesting HB-centred festival on the South Bank which explored, alongside his own work (and presumably with his approval), music by some of the composers who were influential on him - Messiaen (obviously! especially in Verses for Ensembles), Xenakis, Stockhausen, Machaut are names I remember, probably because these would also be on my own list of suspects if I ever made one.
Regarding his theatre works, a colleague recently observed that those written with librettists who weren't principally concerned with writing words (Down by the Greenwood Side with Michael Nyman, Punch and Judy with Stephen Pruslin and The Mask of Orpheus with Peter Zinovieff) make all the others look disappointingly linear and conventional in comparison, an impression I remember very strongly from attending the premiere of Gawain, which I had as they say eagerly anticipated but which I came out of thinking well that was just an opera. Which of course is absolutely fine for many people! (The Second Mrs Kong sits in a strange position between the operas and non-operas, which makes it very interesting too.)
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostSome considerable time ago, I mean 30 years at least, there was an interesting HB-centred festival on the South Bank which explored, alongside his own work (and presumably with his approval), music by some of the composers who were influential on him - Messiaen (obviously! especially in Verses for Ensembles), Xenakis, Stockhausen, Machaut are names I remember, probably because these would also be on my own list of suspects if I ever made one.
Regarding his theatre works, a colleague recently observed that those written with librettists who weren't principally concerned with writing words (Down by the Greenwood Side with Michael Nyman, Punch and Judy with Stephen Pruslin and The Mask of Orpheus with Peter Zinovieff) make all the others look disappointingly linear and conventional in comparison, an impression I remember very strongly from attending the premiere of Gawain, which I had as they say eagerly anticipated but which I came out of thinking well that was just an opera. Which of course is absolutely fine for many people! (The Second Mrs Kong sits in a strange position between the operas and non-operas, which makes it very interesting too.)
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Originally posted by Mandryka View PostYan Tan Tethera
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Listening today to the string quartet, The Tree of Strings, it struck me that this would be good choreographed, some movement to bring out the dramatic gestures. Birtwistle, like Rihm, often has one foot in the theatre of cruelty I think: a primitive ceremonial experience intended to liberate the human subconscious and reveal man to himself.
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Originally posted by Mandryka View PostListening today to the string quartet, The Tree of Strings, it struck me that this would be good choreographed, some movement to bring out the dramatic gestures. Birtwistle, like Rihm, often has one foot in the theatre of cruelty I think: a primitive ceremonial experience intended to liberate the human subconscious and reveal man to himself.
Though I see you are thinking of rather more than that.
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Originally posted by silvestrione View PostYou know, I expect, that in performance (at least when I was there, in Snape) , at the end the players leave one by one, leaving just the cello? So evocative...
Though I see you are thinking of rather more than that.
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