Since music is all about movement, it’s more obviously easier to depict in music something visual which has moving elements, say a sunrise, e.g. ‘Dawn’ in Götterdämmerung, a forest where the leaves are in motion, e.g.‘Forest Murmurs’ in Siegfried, or a river, e.g. the Rhine in the opening of Das Rheingold or Smetana’s Vltava. But a bigger challenge seems to me to depict something more static, say moonlight (has anyone ever done this well?). Rob’s example of VW’s Sinfonia Antarctica depicting ice is a good one, I think, and would fall into that category. Another example might be the opening of Delius’s A Song of Summer, to my ears hugely evocative of a hot summer’s day. (In fact I think I’m thinking of playing it today as an antidote to all this wintry weather.) But you could say that there are ‘moving parts’ to the Antarctic (ice-sheets creaking, wind whistling over icy wastes) or summer (humming of insects, birdsong etc.).
P.S. Just thought of Strauss’s ‘Moonlight Music’ in Capriccio. I don’t include the Moonlight Sonata!
P.S. Just thought of Strauss’s ‘Moonlight Music’ in Capriccio. I don’t include the Moonlight Sonata!
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