I seem to remember that Michael Tippett used break-dancing in one of his operas? If so which one was it? The Ice Break maybe?
Michael Tippett question
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Thomas Roth
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I'm a great admirer of Tippett, but New Year is not a work that I took to. I remember its first broadcast on TV and had to turn it off after about an hour or so. The Midsummer Marriage and King Priam though are masterpieces. I need to try The Knot Garden again but have never heard The Ice Break.
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Originally posted by Suffolkcoastal View PostI'm a great admirer of Tippett, but New Year is not a work that I took to. I remember its first broadcast on TV and had to turn it off after about an hour or so. The Midsummer Marriage and King Priam though are masterpieces. I need to try The Knot Garden again but have never heard The Ice Break.
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I love the music of Michael Tippett, but The Ice Break and New Year were rather odd; too much of an old man trying to be young/mutton dressed up as lamb. Fortunately just afterwards he wrote some very lovely pieces before he died to remind us that at heart he was one of England's most lyrical voices.
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Roehre
Originally posted by ahinton View PostNew Year seems to be to be a particularly egregious example of the kind of faux-trendiness that afflicts large swathes of a particulr symphonic work that he wrote between his magnificent second symphony and his very different but still fascinating fourth and to which he sadly gave a number...
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I remember New Year with great affection. I took part in a series of education workshops held by Glyndebourne prior to the first (and, so far, only) performances of the opera, during which I attended rehearsals of the piece, saw the score and attended the second performance (along with about fifty schoolchildren who all seemed to enjoy the experience). I was so impressed that I bought a ticket for another performance. I also watched the BBC broadcast of the opera, which I had on video for some years before the machine chewed it up. So, forgive me, but I think I can talk with a little more insight than those who "had to turn it off after an hour or so" when I say that I consider it to be the most underated opera in the Tippett canon. I would also humbly suggest that, after The Midsummer Marriage, it is his best work for theatre: indeed, the puzzlement recorded in comments here seem curiously similar to that which was held about MM in, say, the early 'sixties, before Colin Davis' magnificent restoration of the work. It occurs to me that what New Year requires before it is so hastily written off is a restaging - in my dreams, I imagine the Ensemble Modern giving it the gritty precision the Music requires (the one reservation I had of the Glyndebourne performances was the self-conscious nervousness of some of the orchestral playing).
There is glorious Music in New Year: the "love scene" alone, full of the language that Tippett subsequently used in The Rose Lake, is the composer at his finest and the fire of the "Street Music" demonstrates real understanding both of the danger of the outside world that Jo fears and the excitement that the gangs she cowers from unneccesarily feel as "owners" of the streets. Everything moves towards Jo's final acceptance of the world outside her flat (her acceptance of Life and rejection of fear) and the outside world accepting her. Again, Tippett has provided a metaphor of inclusion, an expression in Music of a positive belief in Humanity that embraces multiple cultural aspects of that Humanity (?/those Humanities?) from William Blake to Coronation Street, the Odyssey to Star Trek, Beethoven to MC Hammer.
"Mutton dressed as lamb", Chris? Or an old man learning from the inexperience of the young? "A particularly egregious example of ... faux trendiness", ahinton? Sounds to me that you're talkilng less about Tippett's Music than indulgiing your inner Mr Pee (albeit with more impressive vocabulary)!
Most composers are like carpenters: they have a fixed set of materials that they regularly craft into magnificent artefacts. Tippett is one of those Artists (like Ives) who gather all sorts of disperate materials like magpies, and then bend, break, blow and make these materials their own. The results may often seem puzzling, but they repay close and repeated attention and, I submit, demand our respect.
Best Wishes.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post"A particularly egregious example of ... faux trendiness", ahinton? Sounds to me that you're talkilng less about Tippett's Music than indulgiing your inner Mr Pee (albeit with more impressive vocabulary)!
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostMost composers are like carpenters: they have a fixed set of materials that they regularly craft into magnificent artefacts.
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostTippett is one of those Artists (like Ives) who gather all sorts of disperate materials like magpies, and then bend, break, blow and make these materials their own. The results may often seem puzzling, but they repay close and repeated attention and, I submit, demand our respect.
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By way of happy diversion here are Tippett and Ives "together":
The orchestral arrangement of Circus Band by Charles Ives. Sir Michael Tippett conducting the Leicestershire Schools Symphony Orchestra with the Schola Canto...
Sir Michael Tippett rehearses Charles Ives' Putnam's Camp with the Leicestershire Schools Symphony Orchestra in 1969. Includes an interview with Tippett.
I agree that the Second Symphony is Tippett's finest but love very much the Fourth (perhaps the heavy breathing/wind machine was a miscalculation) and think it is very beautiful. The Third I find an interesting experiment but think that perhaps Symphony was the wrong title (then I think that is true of Das Lied von der Erde).
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Thomas Roth
Tippett himself had second thoughts about the breathing in the fourth symphony. He said it sounded like something from a brothel.
New Year has some gorgeous music.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Chris Newman View PostBy way of happy diversion here are Tippett and Ives "together":
The orchestral arrangement of Circus Band by Charles Ives. Sir Michael Tippett conducting the Leicestershire Schools Symphony Orchestra with the Schola Canto...
Sir Michael Tippett rehearses Charles Ives' Putnam's Camp with the Leicestershire Schools Symphony Orchestra in 1969. Includes an interview with Tippett.
Love it
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