I wonder what the "list" would be if one didn't conflate personal taste with quality ?
Not good pieces by good composers
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostI wonder what the "list" would be if one didn't conflate personal taste with quality ?
A good example might be Elgar's Sea Pictures. This was a commission for the Norwich Festival of 1899, and Elgar fitted its composition around the preparations for the first performance of the Enigma (June 99), the subsequent revision of the end of that work (for a performance in September), as well as moving house. There are five songs, of which 1, 2 and 4 are top-drawer Elgar. The last song is OK, and very Elgarian, but the themes are not quite as inspired. And song 3 (Sabbath Morning at Sea) starts and ends promisingly, but flags terribly in between - it just seems pious Victorian 'religious' writing. Of course the whole is wonderfully scored, but it does betray its hurried birth.
Comment
-
-
Norfolk Born
Meanwhile, back in the land of straightforward answers: I've always thought that Tchaikowsky's 3rd Symphony has been justly neglected, and I don't rate the 'Manfred' that highly, either. Both make far too much of a limited range of musical ideas.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostA good example might be Elgar's Sea Pictures. This was a commission for the Norwich Festival of 1899, and Elgar fitted its composition around the preparations for the first performance of the Enigma (June 99), the subsequent revision of the end of that work (for a performance in September), as well as moving house. There are five songs, of which 1, 2 and 4 are top-drawer Elgar. The last song is OK, and very Elgarian, but the themes are not quite as inspired. And song 3 (Sabbath Morning at Sea) starts and ends promisingly, but flags terribly in between - it just seems pious Victorian 'religious' writing. Of course the whole is wonderfully scored, but it does betray its hurried birth.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by cloughie View PostAnd at the end of the day it is the interpretation that delivers it. For my ears most recordings of Sea Pictures the soloist displays too much vibrato, or am I wrong and it is implicit in Elgar's writing.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by EdgeleyRob View PostAnd why does my beloved Mendelssohn get such a raw deal on here?, his music seems to be getting slated on nearly every thread.Del boy: “Get in, get out, don’t look back. That’s my motto!”
Comment
-
-
Roehre
Originally posted by Parry1912 View PostI actually think that Mendelssohn takes quite a lot of listening to before one fully appreciates how great he was. Add to that that some of his more popular works (Violin Concerto and 'Italian' Symphony, for example) seem superficially quite light and people don't always give him a chance. If they did then they would see the depth behind the surface charm and elegance.
As composer Mendelssohn (with Schubert for that matter, btw) was a real prodigy in that sense that his compositions nearly from the start ARE unmistakingly Mendelssohn (something which cannot be said of Mozart's early works I'm afraid).
The relatively lighthearted works -as e.g. the Misummernightdream overture- and sunny ones like the octet (with an example of one of those remarkable Mendelsohnian scherzos) or the much later violin concerto stick to minds as the "Real" Mendelssohn.
But his string quartets show a digesting of Beethoven's late quartets (Beethoven op.127 influenced Mendelssohn's op.12 considerably) and the development of a much more mature and in depth style in e.g. the string quartet (-pieces) opp. 80 and especially op.81.
There are many other dramatic works and moments in his output - but many completely unknown to a wider public.
I do think as well, that the orchestral output of his is more "homogenous" in its atmospheres and moods than the IMO much more widely ranged chamber music.
As far as the Reformation-symphony is concerned, I am afraid that IMO in this form it is one of Mendelssohn's weaker works. But here we have to keep in mind, that he himself did not publish the work, as his self-criticism told him it needed a severe revision - which his very untimely death prevented.Last edited by Guest; 23-01-12, 14:21.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Parry1912 View PostI actually think that Mendelssohn takes quite a lot of listening to before one fully appreciates how great he was. Add to that that some of his more popular works (Violin Concerto and 'Italian' Symphony, for example) seem superficially quite light and people don't always give him a chance. If they did then they would see the depth behind the surface charm and elegance.Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by amateur51 View Post
Beware Mr Pee! - you're in grave danger of breaking free from your carefully nurtured reputation
I can only think I was temporarily discombobulated after watching Maria Sharapova at the Australian Open.....Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
Comment
-
Comment