Thank you for the explanation.
Extremely annoying pieces of classical music
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Originally posted by Ferretfancy View Postjayne lee wilson,
I remember being amused at a live performance of Kullervo many years ago, at the point where a maiden invites the hero to enter her sleigh. The translation was on the lines of " Join me within, and we can crack our nuts together! " Now there's a nice bit of honest vulgarity for you !
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Originally posted by Roehre View PostI cannot stand Mozart's Jupiter - despite it being IMO brilliant music and knowing the piece inside out. So be it.
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Roehre
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostThat's interesting. I've often considered this to be the weakest of the last 5 symphonies. True, the finale is brilliantly clever, but the 2nd movement seems quite formless and the 1st movement is full of cliches. I know I'm in a minority here; though I do admire the work, I prefer 36-40.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostThat's interesting. I've often considered this to be the weakest of the last 5 symphonies. True, the finale is brilliantly clever, but the 2nd movement seems quite formless and the 1st movement is full of cliches. I know I'm in a minority here; though I do admire the work, I prefer 36-40.
I've often wondered why I can't love the symphonies like I love the piano concertos i.e. hugely. The nearest I get is the finale of No. 41...
"...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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They are all great, wonderfully listenable to at any time whether done for full on (Karajan, Klemperer et al) or for smaller forces EC Pinnock, LCP Norrington
In order of preference 39, 41, 38, 36, 40. That's only marginal for the first four but maybe 40 a liitle way behind thanks to Waldo de Los Rios.
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I, too, prefer Symphonies 38-40, but Mozza's achievement in K551 is remarkable. The "weight" of the Symphonic argument is shifted from the First Movement to the last - I'm tempted to say for the first time in history, but Haydn probably did something similar (he always does!) and Mozza's earlier C major Symphony K338 shows a "first glance" of what he does in the Jupiter. The Music leads to the magnificent Finale, rather than the Finale being a brisk conclusion to events set up - and largely resolved - in the first Movement.
The use of banal material for the opening of K551 (cliched fanfare figures using only the primary triads) is a deliberate "simplification" of the thematic and harmonic language in order to contrast with the wider chromatic range of the Second group of the Exposition (where the orchestration is the composer at his finest) and which itself "prepares" for the surprise lurch to the C minor chord at bar 81 (and the Harmonic progression of bars 81-88 are recapitulated in the Finale, bars 128-134). And the Development starting "in" Eb Major (emphasized by the same I-V oscillations that emphasized the Tonic in bars 1-9), bringing out the importance of the c minor-ness (apologies!) of this C Major work.
As for the "seeming formless"-ness of the Second Movement, I hesitate (but only very briefly) to suggest that such an impression isn't apparent in performances that follow Mozza's Tempo indication (which brings out the "guess where the bar begins" play of the Movement's rhythm & metre, and which clarifies the distinction between thematic and accompanimental materials) and which use Mozza's instruments (which clarify the melodies and thence the outlines of the "Sonata Form" of the Movement. As does the Exposition repeat, which can only "work" if the chosen Tempo follows the composer's markings.)
Sorry for the Essay, but to lump one of humanity's most incisive masterpieces with "extremely annoying pieces" merits some protest, I felt.
Best Wishes.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Remarkably detailed insights, fhg - I'm suitably daunted (and newly enlightened)...Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI, too, prefer Symphonies 38-40, but Mozza's achievement in K551 is remarkable. The "weight" of the Symphonic argument is shifted from the First Movement to the last - I'm tempted to say for the first time in history, but Haydn probably did something similar (he always does!) and Mozza's earlier C major Symphony K338 shows a "first glance" of what he does in the Jupiter. The Music leads to the magnificent Finale, rather than the Finale being a brisk conclusion to events set up - and largely resolved - in the first Movement.
The use of banal material for the opening of K551 (cliched fanfare figures using only the primary triads) is a deliberate "simplification" of the thematic and harmonic language in order to contrast with the wider chromatic range of the Second group of the Exposition (where the orchestration is the composer at his finest) and which itself "prepares" for the surprise lurch to the C minor chord at bar 81 (and the Harmonic progression of bars 81-88 are recapitulated in the Finale, bars 128-134). And the Development starting "in" Eb Major (emphasized by the same I-V oscillations that emphasized the Tonic in bars 1-9), bringing out the importance of the c minor-ness (apologies!) of this C Major work.
As for the "seeming formless"-ness of the Second Movement, I hesitate (but only very briefly) to suggest that such an impression isn't apparent in performances that follow Mozza's Tempo indication (which brings out the "guess where the bar begins" play of the Movement's rhythm & metre, and which clarifies the distinction between thematic and accompanimental materials) and which use Mozza's instruments (which clarify the melodies and thence the outlines of the "Sonata Form" of the Movement. As does the Exposition repeat, which can only "work" if the chosen Tempo follows the composer's markings.)
Sorry for the Essay, but to lump one of humanity's most incisive masterpieces with "extremely annoying pieces" merits some protest, I felt.
Best Wishes.
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Originally posted by Caliban View PostOK festivities over, Christmas tree fairies are back in the cupboard... How about a few "bêtes noires"? I've just been listening to the French "Tribune des Critiques" programme about The Nutcracker, and I realise that my list of REALLY annoying pieces has three items vying for top spot:
1= Tchaikovsky "Nutcracker" - Pas de Deux.. That ruddy downward scale repeated ad nauseam, louder and louder (ffff by the end )
1= Tchaikovsky "Tatiana's Letter" scene, Eugene Onegin (have avoided it sufficiently long to forget what it sounds like)
1= Liszt "Les Préludes"
Anyone else got any bugbear pieces? (I expect "Bolero" to feature strongly - though I rather like it, in the right hands)
Happy New Year all
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