Originally posted by MrGongGong
View Post
Through the looking Glass
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Boilk View PostAha! So Tracy Emin is a great artist after all! Thanks for enlightening me, I'd always mistakenly thought the vast majority of her work was a pile of utter c**p.
BUT
don't conflate taste with significance or even value
It's not a con even though I happen not to like it or even think that it's somewhat over rated .........
Comment
-
-
Tricky one this. I like some Glass pieces, but I gave up on that symphony rather early on - perhaps after 15 minutes (though might have been due to non musical reasons, such as having other things to do ...).
It does seem still to be available for listening again, if anyone wants to give it a try - http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01j28w0
The problem with some pieces (and maybe composers as well) is knowing when to write them off.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostTricky one this. I like some Glass pieces, but I gave up on that symphony rather early on - perhaps after 15 minutes.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Dave2002 View Post
The problem with some pieces (and maybe composers as well) is knowing when to write them off.
(Havergal Brian, Frank Bridge, anyone?)
Comment
-
-
heliocentric
Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostI also happen to think that most of her work is rubbish
BUT
don't conflate taste with significance or even value
It's not a con even though I happen not to like it or even think that it's somewhat over rated .........
Comment
-
I'm not sure Benjamin "lost confidence" because of anybody else's perceptions/prescriptions about his Music. He spent nearly a decade after his early success refining and rediscovering his needs for himself and has produced much fine Music in recent years that is regularly played throughout Europe. I think he's perfectly happy in his own skin and quite content to let the UK catch up when it's ready!
Much more frequent, in my opinion, is the phenomenon of the UK composer ruined by success: an initial set of remarkable works that result in an inundation of commissions that prevent their composers from developing their Music, forcing them to repeat ideas that featured in their early successes over and over, so that they lose whatever potential they had to a stream of mannerisms and clichés. (James MacMillan, Mark Antony Turnage, Thomas Ades, anyone?)[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI'm not sure Benjamin "lost confidence" because of anybody else's perceptions/prescriptions about his Music. He spent nearly a decade after his early success refining and rediscovering his needs for himself and has produced much fine Music in recent years that is regularly played throughout Europe. I think he's perfectly happy in his own skin and quite content to let the UK catch up when it's ready!
Much more frequent, in my opinion, is the phenomenon of the UK composer ruined by success: an initial set of remarkable works that result in an inundation of commissions that prevent their composers from developing their Music, forcing them to repeat ideas that featured in their early successes over and over, so that they lose whatever potential they had to a stream of mannerisms and clichés. (James MacMillan, Mark Antony Turnage, Thomas Ades, anyone?)
Comment
-
-
heliocentric
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Postan inundation of commissions that prevent their composers from developing their Music, forcing them to repeat ideas that featured in their early successes over and over, so that they lose whatever potential they had to a stream of mannerisms and clichés. (James MacMillan, Mark Antony Turnage, Thomas Ades, anyone?)
Comment
-
Roehre
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI'm not sure Benjamin "lost confidence" because of anybody else's perceptions/prescriptions about his Music. He spent nearly a decade after his early success refining and rediscovering his needs for himself and has produced much fine Music in recent years that is regularly played throughout Europe. I think he's perfectly happy in his own skin and quite content to let the UK catch up when it's ready!
Much more frequent, in my opinion, is the phenomenon of the UK composer ruined by success: an initial set of remarkable works that result in an inundation of commissions that prevent their composers from developing their Music, forcing them to repeat ideas that featured in their early successes over and over, so that they lose whatever potential they had to a stream of mannerisms and clichés. (James MacMillan, Mark Antony Turnage, Thomas Ades, anyone?)
Comment
-
Originally posted by heliocentric View Post... although who's to say they wouldn't also have done so without the "success"? After all, that kind of attention is usually accorded to young composers whose work leans comfortably on institutionally-sanctioned traditions and forms from the start, in other words who are already halfway to mannerism and cliché, don't you think?
Another way of doing things is Jonathan Dove, whose early successes did little for me but who, following a "silent" period, is now producing much more "radical" work - the opposite of the "traditional" trajectory![FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Boilk View PostAha! So Tracy Emin is a great artist after all! Thanks for enlightening me, I'd always mistakenly thought the vast majority of her work was a pile of utter c**p.
I must say I'd come to your 'mistaken' conclusion too, Boilk... likewise about Mr Glass, insofar as I've sampled his works. I'm sure there are exceptions, but with limited time available in life for music which for me is inexhaustibly excellent, I find I have to make choices based on partial information - 'snap' decisions, possibly. I have no inclination to give either Mr Glass or Ms Emin any further time - my personal choice is that there are hugely more profitable and enjoyable ways of spending that time."...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..."
Comment
-
-
I agree that the ENC argument is over-used, often as a substitute for genuine consideration of why the piece doesn't work for that listener, but the Guardian review did not (as I read it) use the ENC/con trick criticism - that was in a subsequent post on this thread.
So I would be interested to know why MrGG thinks the review is "c..p" (I'm sure this is not simply another way of saying that he doesn't agree with it ).
Comment
-
Comment