Britten and Wagner Anniversaries: Nothing to Celebrate?

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  • MrGongGong
    Full Member
    • Nov 2010
    • 18357

    #61
    Originally posted by Flosshilde View Post
    Quite.

    So it's impossible to know if Wagner's ant-semitism affected his music


    or if it didn't.
    I don't know that that is the case at all
    as music is more than sonic experience (a great book)

    Wagner's invented a word to describe what he did as he thought that "music" wasn't sufficient
    so I would think that it probably was affected by his beliefs
    but in what way is open to speculation , study and research

    Cage said (? I think ...... or he was quoting someone else)
    "one should never seek out personality as it cannot be avoided"

    Comment

    • ahinton
      Full Member
      • Nov 2010
      • 16122

      #62
      Originally posted by doversoul View Post
      So how much has that to do with the audience of your music? Should the audience know your personal life and ideas or the circumstance in which the music was made in order to appreciate your music?
      A good question, even though ultimately unanswerable; what do we really know - and, for that matter, what do we really need to know - of Bach's day-to-day existence that we can actually attach in our minds to meaningful thoughts about the ways in which we ought best to listen to his music? The big problem here relates, I think, to those who listen to any music without having experienced at first hand and accordingly responded personally to any of the aspects of the particular cultural environment in which that music was composed; this is of particular importance to, say, 21st century English or Brazilian listeners taking in music from other lands and other eras, to the extent that anything that they might first read about those times and circumstances in which the composers worked can only go so far in imparting to them anything of lasting value and importance to their personal take on that music. As I've said in other contexts, we not only don't but can't listen to Bach as Bach's contemporaries listened to his work when it was newly composed and being performed for the first time, but that doesn't in any sense undermine either the intrinsic expressive power of Bach's music or its ability to speak meaningfully to non-Germans many generations after its was composed when it's being performed (or listened to in broadcasts or recordings) in circumstances quite different to any with which Bach would have been familiar.

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      • Eine Alpensinfonie
        Host
        • Nov 2010
        • 20570

        #63
        If Tchaikovsky had been heterosexual, would his music have sounded more like Rimsky or Borodin? I doubt it. But we can never know.

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        • ahinton
          Full Member
          • Nov 2010
          • 16122

          #64
          Originally posted by MrGongGong View Post
          Cage said (? I think ...... or he was quoting someone else)
          "one should never seek out personality as it cannot be avoided"
          Cage (if indeed it actually was him in this instance) said lots of things, not least (in the light of the present context) that Varèse didn't treat sounds as sounds but treated them as Varèse, which "thought" long ago prompted me to wonder what on earth else Varèse was supposed to do with them; if that remark was intended by Cage as any kind of illustration of the notion that "one should never seek out personality as it cannot be avoided", then it did him few if any favours as far as I am concerned and could be argued to have backfired upon him...

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          • Flosshilde
            Full Member
            • Nov 2010
            • 7988

            #65
            Originally posted by MrGongGong View Post
            I don't know that that is the case at all
            as music is more than sonic experience (a great book)

            Wagner's invented a word to describe what he did as he thought that "music" wasn't sufficient
            Do you mean gesamtkunstwerk? Not invented by Wagner, either as a word or as a concept, but something that he said he wanted his work to be - a synthesis of poetry, music, sculpture & painting, & acting; something that is commonplace in opera production now, but rare in the mid-19th century.

            so I would think that it probably was affected by his beliefs
            but in what way is open to speculation , study and research
            You think it was, but I think it's impossible to know. I think that people who know of Wagner's political/social beliefs claim to be able to identify elements within his works that express them (the portrayal of Mime & Alberich in the Ring, for example), but I would suggest that without that knowledge such identification could not be made.

            Comment

            • ahinton
              Full Member
              • Nov 2010
              • 16122

              #66
              Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View Post
              If Tchaikovsky had been heterosexual, would his music have sounded more like Rimsky or Borodin? I doubt it. But we can never know.
              That's just the point but, whilst we can indeed well argue that we'll "never know" about this in the cases of Tchaikovsky or Szymanowski, or Copland or any number of 20th century American composers (for instance), can we really "know" about this in terms of being able to provide credible, definitive and authoritative answers in respect of living composers of homosexual or indeed any other sexual persuasions? Of course not - just as we couldn't identify the work of any composer as being that of a female or male just by listening to it; as Thea Musgrave (who surely understand this as well as anyone) long ago pointed out, she's a woman and a composer but rarely both at the same time...

              Comment

              • MrGongGong
                Full Member
                • Nov 2010
                • 18357

                #67
                This is worth reading (it's about electroacoustic music but has some interesting things about how people respond to music with different amounts of information and different types of information)

                Comment

                • Lateralthinking1

                  #68
                  With respect, I think that a key moral point is being blurred in the above discussion. It is that there are several thousand oceans between gender and sexual orientation on the one hand and anti-semitism and child abuse on the other. That much applies irrespective of what any music has to say and irrespective of anything that might apply to any of the composers mentioned.

                  There is then the question of whether a composer's identity and/or behaviour are inextricably linked to the music. That wholly depends on the composer, the identity, the behaviour and the music. A socialist might not knowingly put any of her socialism into her music although some might say that her music clearly indicates that she spent several months at Greenham Common. A train spotter might be so enthusiastic about trains that every piece of music he writes is designed to sound like trains on a track.

                  None of the "music" by Gary Glitter is ever played on the radio. It would be front page news if it were to be and it would be the end of the BBC as we know it, even accounting for the general waywardness of R1 and R2. From memory the lyrics of his songs amounted to "rock n roll, oh oh, rock n roll". Bluesologists might remark that the term "rock n roll" has, in historical terms, sexual connotations. It also has a musical meaning and there is no indication of immorality or illegality. That implies nothing of Britten whatsoever but it says much about a broadcaster's required approach to any composer proven to be of the Glitter persuasion.

                  As for composers who place their identities in the music, all one has to ask is how much air time would be given to a modern opera in celebration of the life and outlook of Nick Griffin. I doubt very much that it would ever be permitted to see the light of day.
                  Last edited by Guest; 07-01-13, 22:46.

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                  • Barbirollians
                    Full Member
                    • Nov 2010
                    • 11675

                    #69
                    I suspect that I shall be listening to a lot more Verdi than either Wagner or Britten .

                    Comment

                    • Mr Pee
                      Full Member
                      • Nov 2010
                      • 3285

                      #70
                      Originally posted by Barbirollians View Post
                      I suspect that I shall be listening to a lot more Verdi than either Wagner or Britten .

                      And I shall be listening to no Verdi whatsoever. I find his operas dreary in the extreme.

                      As for all the flim-flam about whether Britten was a homosexualist, or Wagner was an anti-Semite, and to whether that affected their compositions, what the heck does it matter?

                      Just listen to the music. That is what they would have wanted us to do.
                      Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.

                      Mark Twain.

                      Comment

                      • Beef Oven

                        #71
                        Originally posted by Mr Pee View Post
                        And I shall be listening to no Verdi whatsoever. I find his operas dreary in the extreme.

                        As for all the flim-flam about whether Britten was a homosexualist, or Wagner was an anti-Semite, and to whether that affected their compositions, what the heck does it matter?

                        Just listen to the music. That is what they would have wanted us to do.
                        Uh? Was Britten gay? Wagner anti-semetic? OMG!

                        Comment

                        • MrGongGong
                          Full Member
                          • Nov 2010
                          • 18357

                          #72
                          SO what of the new Glass Opera ?

                          Yeah Beefy
                          and there are, SHOCK HORROR, racist football supporters ........

                          Comment

                          • ahinton
                            Full Member
                            • Nov 2010
                            • 16122

                            #73
                            Originally posted by Mr Pee View Post
                            And I shall be listening to no Verdi whatsoever
                            Your loss. Falstaff? Otello? Requiem? String Quartet? Four Sacred Pieces? Dull? I wish that I could write music that dull! (and I'm not the world's greatest Verdi fan by any means).

                            Originally posted by Mr Pee View Post
                            As for all the flim-flam about whether Britten was a homosexualist
                            I cannot imagine for the life of me from whom you might have borrowed the term "homosexualist", but do please return it to its rightful owner before you get charged disinterest on it - and let's not even get on to the term "flim-flam"...

                            Originally posted by Mr Pee View Post
                            or Wagner was an anti-Semite, and to whether that affected their compositions, what the heck does it matter?
                            Of course it doesn't matter whether or how it might or might not have affected their compositions or whether indeed it's possible for any of us to determine with any credibility whether or not it did so.

                            Originally posted by Mr Pee View Post
                            Just listen to the music. That is what they would have wanted us to do.
                            Indeed. The late, much missed and quite improbably modest Richard Rodney Bennett (who was gay but not an anti-Semite) would have agreed; that's all that he wanted people to do with his music - and to enjoy what he'd done in their own ways.

                            Comment

                            • MrGongGong
                              Full Member
                              • Nov 2010
                              • 18357

                              #74
                              Originally posted by Mr Pee View Post
                              Just listen to the music. That is what they would have wanted us to do.
                              Do you mean JUST the sonic experience ?
                              or the text
                              or the con(text)
                              or the semiotics of the performance

                              because I don't see many folks who say this at acousmatic music events ................ (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acousmatic)

                              Comment

                              • Beef Oven

                                #75
                                Originally posted by MrGongGong View Post
                                SO what of the new Glass Opera ?

                                Yeah Beefy
                                and there are, SHOCK HORROR, racist football supporters ........
                                Well I aint listening to anymore Wagner, nor will I follow football.

                                Comment

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