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As for the P&Cs, this is about as good as it gets:
knockout (see my message #9 above)
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
I hope nobody takes offence. I'm sure there's lots of stuff I like that people think is dross.
I certainly take no offence at all - even though I agree with Stravinsky that Elgar is "a supremely great composer of whom the British people should be proud". Elgar was never part of a 'school' or 'movement', which makes him difficult to categorise, but to say he is 'over-rated' is rather dismissive. What does it mean, other than you simply don't enjoy his music? Otherwise, 'over-rated' surely implies that your view is so obviously the right one that you can't understand why anyone could feel differently (Lord Gnome might say "any fool know"), which I doubt is what you intended.
But Elgar has always drawn polarised views. I think it has something to do with the disconcerting feeling of genius that much of the music has - anything less would not raise such controversy. You can talk of Elgar seriously in the same company as Mahler, Strauss, Suk, Szymanovsky, Schmidt and others without embarrassment, while at the same time being defensive about "wider still and wider", or the stink of incense in Gerontius. We don't do this with other composers.
What does it mean, other than you simply don't enjoy his music? Otherwise, 'over-rated' surely implies that your view is so obviously the right one that you can't understand why anyone could feel differently (Lord Gnome might say "any fool know"), which I doubt is what you intended.
What I intended to say is that I view him as a minor composer, not one of great note. I - as I'm sure everyone else does - have a metaphorical ranking into which I place composers, according to what I believe is their import or their talent to move (me). What I don't expect people to do is have the same ranking that I have. (Unless I'm arguing with my brother, in which case he will always, by definition, be Wrong).
What I mean by "over rated" has little to do with whether I like the music or not
the Elgar enthusiasts often go into great rapture over (in particular !) Gerontius which I find to be pompous, overblown and has a dreadful libretto wallowing in the worst anglo-catholic nonsense. Elgar was a great composer (YES I do mean this) he wrote some great music but the religious fervour of his disciples is a bit excessive.
If one could listen with fresh ears then i'm sure there would be much to enjoy in P&C #1 , however one can't "un-invent" what it has come to represent. For me (and this is IMV ) its similar to so called "dissonant" instrumental music, I hear the dissonance in the same way that you might, but I don't find any "dissonant" instrumental music really unsettling (maybe the opening of Black Angels comes close ?).
What I mean by "over rated" has little to do with whether I like the music or not
the Elgar enthusiasts often go into great rapture over (in particular !) Gerontius which I find to be pompous, overblown and has a dreadful libretto wallowing in the worst anglo-catholic nonsense. Elgar was a great composer (YES I do mean this) he wrote some great music but the religious fervour of his disciples is a bit excessive.
If one could listen with fresh ears then i'm sure there would be much to enjoy in P&C #1 , however one can't "un-invent" what it has come to represent. For me (and this is IMV ) its similar to so called "dissonant" instrumental music, I hear the dissonance in the same way that you might, but I don't find any "dissonant" instrumental music really unsettling (maybe the opening of Black Angels comes close ?).
Yes, I share similar views of many pieces of music. Gerontius (like anything with a libretto) necessarily suffers from having extra-musical associations. And I do share your dislike of the veneration in which it can be held, which sometimes take attention away from later works (the symphonies and Falstaff, for instance) written when EE's style had 'matured' into Modernism (or whatever -ism you like).
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