Originally posted by Alf-Prufrock
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The five masterpieces that changed the course of musical history
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostAnd to think ... I only suggested 4' 33" as a joke.
" A joke" sums up the whole "piece" and the pseudo-intellectual twoddle surrounding it very neatly.Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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John Skelton
Originally posted by Mr Pee View PostExcellent, Alpensinfonie. I should have twigged.
" A joke" sums up the whole "piece" and the pseudo-intellectual twoddle surrounding it very neatly.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostSo did Cage!
No I think you did right to include it - after 4'33" composers knew they could get away with anything - or even nothing!
eer no he didn't
and surely one needs to go to a performance ?
and the conspiracy theory of contemporary music is bollocks
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostI agree with Mr Pee that Gerontius is a great work but I don't really see how it changed the course of music history, even that of the country in which it was composed. I'm not sure whether John Skelton's trying to suggest that this work is replete with clichés, platitudes and banalities but, if so, I would have to disagree roundly.
Agreed. I've been following Gerontius as it has moved from thread to thread in recent weeks, and I am amazed at the antipathy it generates. I don't mean simple dislike (we all have pieces of music we don't enjoy - in my case, the last movement of Beethoven's Ninth, which I find boring and unsatisfying) but full-blown hatred. Why is this? I suppose it must be the text: I just can't see people getting so worked up about the music itself ("I think it's laughable the way Elgar has whole triads - the very foundations of harmony - performing Wagnerian side-slips; then there's the use of a semi-chorus: what rubbish! Layers of sound: bah! humbug!") No - I suspect it's the text, to which many (most?) people are antagonistic. In fact, the Catholic Dvorak considered setting Gerontius for the 1891 Birmingham Festival, but was persuaded it would be provocative. So he set the requiem mass instead (odd, isn't it, that no objections are raised to the myriad settings of other Catholic texts - the requiem mass, the stabat mater, the magnificat, etc.?)
None of this alters the fact that Gerontius could hardly be thought of as one of the five most significant pieces of all time. It certainly influenced many things that followed (sometimes surprisingly - Bluebeard's Castle for one, A Child of Our Time for another, not forgetting many Hollywood film scores) and the multi-layered choral/orchestral effects became so commonplace that it can be a surprise to realise that Elgar was the first, or even one of the first, to use them.Last edited by Pabmusic; 25-01-12, 01:08.
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Beef Oven
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostCage
IMV
the "joke" and "theatrical" performances of 4:33" I have been to miss the point of the piece
it's not a joke
it's not a con
it's not a conspiracy
its as significant a piece as the Eroica
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Originally posted by Alf-Prufrock View PostI think I would agree now about Tristan rather than Parsifal, and I did consider Schoenberg (but which work?)
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