The Symphony after 1945
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Panjandrum
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Two great postings on the Schoenberg.
Thanks Jayne - you may not have succeeded in convincing me about Bruckner, , but writing as an autodidact my feelings on the Second Ch Symph coincide with yours. I have the 2-piano version performed by Ogdon and Brenda Lucas from the boxed "Pianistic Philosophies" LP set, which I find very hard going, as well as the orchestral version.
BTW I once played the Berg Op 6 pieces to a girlfriend; she fled the room in absolute terror!
S-A
Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostBy the time he composed the Op. 25 Suite and Op.26 Wind Quintet Schoenberg was indeed using a radical language, the more completely worked-out version of serial technique based on the 12-note row. Alexander Goehr, in an excellent, presumably long-lost BBC documentary, made it clear that it was the harmony based on this technique that was radical, not of course the classical sonata and other forms that Schoenberg continued to use for most of his life. I don't have Berg's article to hand, but in the context of the 1st Quartet I would guess that it was the sheer density of musical events -an awful lot going on at once - that he would be drawing attention to. My point about the pieces like Verklarte Nacht and the 2nd Chamber Symphony would be partly that - a higher incidence of more conventionally melodic, less densely contrapuntal, music; but mainly the tonal character of much of their music, i.e the harmony doesn't sound as other-worldly (other-planetly!) as, say, the Op. 26 Quintet. If you jump from the start of the 2nd Chamber Symphony to that of the Quintet, it's quite a jolt!
I don't want this post to be too vast, so I'll say more later - but you're quite right about Schoenberg being "The Reluctant Revolutionary" - remember the wonderful story from the 1st WW trenches, when someone asked him if he was the famous composer Schoenberg and he said, "well, no-one wanted to be him but someone had to be, so I volunteered for the job!"
With Berg, there has often been a vogue for the accessibly melodic neo-Romantic lament of the Violin Concerto (complete with Bach Chorale - best thing in it, perhaps...), whereas I prefer him in Op.6 Pieces mode... more texturally inventive, innovative and concentrated, more... radical.
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Oh ahinton!
You're not getting away with that! I think many here will want to know why you don't consider Tippett's 3rd to be a symphony...
(The committee sits back, arms folded...)Originally posted by ahinton View PostI rather doubt that anyone here thought otherwise!...
Hundreds, probably; one has only to go to http://www.unsungcomposers.com/forum/index.php to find people discussing symphonic repertoire - at least some of it post-WWII - by composers of whom some of us have little more that the faintest knowledge and, in some cases, might have never heard of at all.
It was indeed quite a journey, just as was A Midsummer Marriage to New Year and Quartets 1-3 to Quartet 4 (5 seems almost to want to revisit the eralier Tippett, rather as parts of the Triple Concerto do). Of the three Tippett symphonies (and that's not a misprint), I still find the second the finest of all, followed by the fourth and lastly the first.
This is all repertoire of a very high order indeed, the Concerto for Orchestra indeed being one of the very best things that Gerhard did - but much as I appreciate your recording recommendations, I remain most saddened at the lack of opportunities to hear these works in their right place, the concert hall.
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Originally posted by Panjandrum View PostSo why repeat it here?
Originally posted by Panjandrum View PostI think JLW was employing a device known as the rhetorical question, don't you?
Originally posted by Panjandrum View Post"Sic" is the most elegant way of drawing attention to an apparent misprint.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostOh ahinton!
You're not getting away with that! I think many here will want to know why you don't consider Tippett's 3rd to be a symphony...
(The committee sits back, arms folded...)
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Originally posted by 3rd Viennese School View PostDid anyone hear Saturday’s Music Matters show? I taped it and listened to it on Monday night as it’s a subject I’m really interested in.
For me, the most thought-provoking point so far (apart from the various definitions of what a "symphony" is) was the comment about how indirectly, the rise to power of the Nazis, and the resulting murder or dispora of musicians, played a big role in snuffing out the great German symphonic tradition. The reference to Weill for example, who started down the symphonic track but then left and switched to other modes of expression...
Any thoughts here about that aspect, from 3VS and others?
"...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..."
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Tippett's 3rd Symphony is one of his boldest, most original creations, tightly unified motivically but embracing an extraordinary range of contrasting moods, emotions, orchestral colours and musical styles. It sets the elemental forces, both human energy and natural phenomena, of part one against the evocations of urban, totally human passions and conflict - at times inhuman as only humans can be - of part two. His quotation and subsequent distortion of Beethoven's Ode to Joy couldn't be clearer in addressing the problem of what we have lost - that universal aspiration to a sisterhood and brotherhood of humankind, the cry of joy which has become impossible for an artist to express with anything approaching the same power and conviction. In 2011, we are still further away from such possibilities than in 1972, but is there a composer alive now who could address these issues so directly in a convincing, large-scale symphonic structure?
The blues numbers themselves have many memorable and vivid musical ideas and images, those wildly gurgling winds in the fast blues, the sliding, sidestepping bass line in the last one, but it's here that I find the one "embarrassing" feature of the work - the lyrics! I don't envy the soprano who has to sing the second number; maybe we should blame TS Eliot for encouraging Tippett to write his own (for Child of Our Time)... I would add too that a true Big Band would give a much better account of the blues numbers than the LSO or the BSO manage (for all their other glories). Might cost a bit to mount it though...
For me, the blues works in context as the greatest possible contrast with part one, the endlessly inventive contrapuntal textures now followed by tunes and accompaniments, popular song. Thereafter the many threads of the work are drawn together in a coda of great dramatic force (and with better, more direct lyrics), but one which inevitably arrives at no musical or emotional answer to the Great Questions that have been asked.
Listening to the work now one is struck by how fresh and how challenging it still is to both ear and heart; I can well imagine the shocked or dismissive reaction it might get now, from audience and reviewers, in a world where forgettable accessibility is the norm for premieres, and music of true integrity and complexity like Ferneyhough or Dillon tends to be ghettoised into late night broadcasts from scattered festivals...
The Tippett dares to be both direct in its message and almost shockingly bold and original in its means.
Originally posted by ahinton View PostOh, so there's a committee now, is there? I was only responding to your comments, not those of a committee! Anyway, to be honest, it's not so much that I can't bring myself to accept that work as a symphony at all but that I can't bring myself to accept it as a Tippett symphony, given how awful, clunky, pseudo-trendy and at times embarrassingly point-proving a work it seems to be and given on the other hand how fine Tippett's other three symphonies are. Sorry and all that, but I suppose it's now back to that committee...Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 06-12-11, 03:33.
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Caliban, this is definitely the moment to consider Karl Amadeus Hartmann's Symphonies, which are a deeply eloquent response to this very problem...(only the 1st of his 8 pre-dates WW2)...
But it's very late so I hope someone can pick up the thread tomorrow... very busy day for me but - I'll be back.Originally posted by Caliban View PostI am in the process of listening to it (thanks to the podcast) in small sections.
For me, the most thought-provoking point so far (apart from the various definitions of what a "symphony" is) was the comment about how indirectly, the rise to power of the Nazis, and the resulting murder or dispora of musicians, played a big role in snuffing out the great German symphonic tradition. The reference to Weill for example, who started down the symphonic track but then left and switched to other modes of expression...
Any thoughts here about that aspect, from 3VS and others?
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Panjandrum
Originally posted by ahinton View Post
I know that very well, thank you! What you seem (or preferred) not to have noticed is that I specifically stated that it was NOT a misprint!
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostTippett's 3rd Symphony is one of his boldest, most original creations, tightly unified motivically but embracing an extraordinary range of contrasting moods, emotions, orchestral colours and musical styles. It sets the elemental forces, both human energy and natural phenomena, of part one against the evocations of urban, totally human passions and conflict - at times inhuman as only humans can be - of part two. His quotation and subsequent distortion of Beethoven's Ode to Joy couldn't be clearer in addressing the problem of what we have lost - that universal aspiration to a sisterhood and brotherhood of humankind, the cry of joy which has become impossible for an artist to express with anything approaching the same power and conviction. In 2011, we are still further away from such possibilities than in 1972, but is there a composer alive now who could address these issues so directly in a convincing, large-scale symphonic structure?
The blues numbers themselves have many memorable and vivid musical ideas and images, those wildly gurgling winds in the fast blues, the sliding, sidestepping bass line in the last one, but it's here that I find the one "embarrassing" feature of the work - the lyrics! I don't envy the soprano who has to sing the second number; maybe we should blame TS Eliot for encouraging Tippett to write his own (for Child of Our Time)... I would add too that a true Big Band would give a much better account of the blues numbers than the LSO or the BSO manage (for all their other glories). Might cost a bit to mount it though...
For me, the blues works in context as the greatest possible contrast with part one, the endlessly inventive contrapuntal textures now followed by tunes and accompaniments, popular song. Thereafter the many threads of the work are drawn together in a coda of great dramatic force (and with better, more direct lyrics), but one which inevitably arrives at no musical or emotional answer to the Great Questions that have been asked.
Listening to the work now one is struck by how fresh and how challenging it still is to both ear and heart; I can well imagine the shocked or dismissive reaction it might get now, from audience and reviewers, in a world where forgettable accessibility is the norm for premieres, and music of true integrity and complexity like Ferneyhough or Dillon tends to be ghettoised into late night broadcasts from scattered festivals...
The Tippett dares to be both direct in its message and almost shockingly bold and original in its means.
Curiously, though Britten barely concealed his disdain for the piece when he first heard it, at that time he was urging me to "get to know as much of Michael's music as possible" and spoke with great warmth about him and quite a few other works of his. He let out quite a revealing remark that indirectly and coincidentally seems to bear out in an interesting (well, to me, anyway!) way the kind of thing of which we've all probably heard rather too much, namely Tippett's alleged shortage of technique compared to Britten himself; I cannot now recall his exact words, but the gist of what he said was "when I write something, I have to be sure that I know just how to do it; when Michael writes something, he doesn't worry about such things at all - but then look at the results!"
Anyway, many thanks for writing about this symphony as you have; if my profound disappointment with the work has provided to you the necessary encouragement to write as you have above, then I've at least done something useful!
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostCaliban, this is definitely the moment to consider Karl Amadeus Hartmann's Symphonies, which are a deeply eloquent response to this very problem...(only the 1st of his 8 pre-dates WW2)...
But it's very late so I hope someone can pick up the thread tomorrow... very busy day for me but - I'll be back.
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Originally posted by Panjandrum View PostNo, I had noticed; and that is why I suggested that sic was the correct terminology for ensuring that the reader realised that there was no misprint, and what was written was intentional. Perhaps I should have made it clearer; when I wrote "apparent" I was referring to the fact that, to the uninitiated or unenlightened, it may have appeared a misprint. In these situations, one should write "sic" to confirm that the word used was intentional, it being latin of course, for "it is written thus". It's all explained here, so don't just take my word for it.
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I'm in agreement with you ahinton about Tippett 3, it has the same effect on me. I wish I liked it better but it just doesn't come off for me. Another work of the same period, Songs for Dov, I also 'don't get'.
As for K A Hartmann, yes a very good symphonist, I have all the symphonies and a couple of other works and must get round to exploring this intriguing composer more. I've access to the University library (for the time being) to a few scores of his works so must take another look. I was quite astonished that a short work of his broadcast a few weeks ago on R3 was the 1st piece of his that R3 had broadcast in over 3 years!
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostCaliban, this is definitely the moment to consider Karl Amadeus Hartmann's Symphonies, which are a deeply eloquent response to this very problem...(only the 1st of his 8 pre-dates WW2)...
But it's very late so I hope someone can pick up the thread tomorrow... very busy day for me but - I'll be back."...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..."
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Roehre
Originally posted by Suffolkcoastal View PostI'm in agreement with you ahinton about Tippett 3, it has the same effect on me. I wish I liked it better but it just doesn't come off for me. Another work of the same period, Songs for Dov, I also 'don't get'.
As for K A Hartmann, yes a very good symphonist, I have all the symphonies and a couple of other works and must get round to exploring this intriguing composer more. I've access to the University library (for the time being) to a few scores of his works so must take another look. I was quite astonished that a short work of his broadcast a few weeks ago on R3 was the 1st piece of his that R3 had broadcast in over 3 years!
KAHartmann was a brilliant symphonist. There are some problems however with the chronology of the symphonies, and as they are numbered now, only the nos. 6-8 are original works in that sense that these don't consist of parts of earlier conceived symphonies, or are based on earlier ones.
So we've got more than the numbered eight symphonies. We have to add the Miserae (1934), theSymphonie l'Oeuvre (1939)Sinfonia tragica (1940/'43), the Symphonische Hymnen (1942) and the Symphonie Klagegesang(1944), as well as his last, but unfinished work Gesangszene (1962/'63) as about the latter Hartmann was in doubt how to call it, as its working title was Symphonie IX Gesangszene. Some concertos have to be taken into account as well, as one of them was reworked as Symphonie concertante [no.5].
This simply means that approximately half of Hartmann's symphonies are rooted before WW2, or at least stem from before 1945.
I personally consider the works up to and including no.1 as one group, nos.2-4 as another, the stravinskyan no.5 as a stand alone work, and 6-8 + Gesangszene as the concluding group of symphonies.
In that sense it is Hartmann (and to some extent Hindemith, as IIRC all but one [Mathis der Maler, 1934] of his were written between 1946 and 1955 !) more than Henze who took the German symphony across the 1945 borderline.
Btw, Another composer - Dutch, but with strong German musical roots and highly regarded in the USA for his music for symphonic wind bands- is Henk Badings, with 15 symphonies (1931- 1983).Last edited by Guest; 06-12-11, 09:20.
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