Originally posted by teamsaint
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Writing A Symphony - How Do They Do It?
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostI've not studied all of the material myself, but I can tell you that there's some 120+ plus pages with all sorts of jottings which obviously meant more to Elgar than they could possibly have done to anyone else at the time of writing, particularly in the light of his habits of "building" symphonic edifices by jigsaw-like procedures and having recourse to fragments of ideas in his sketch books that might date from many years earlier and which had often been penned without any clear idea of how he might work them, let alone for what particular work they might ultimately be destined.
These completed/finished/reconstructed works are interesting exercises for the listener.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostI have read the quite extensive sleeve notes on the Andrew Davis recording, which are certainly an interesting insight, although I suppose they do tend tell us what Payne wants us to know.
Originally posted by teamsaint View PostThese completed/finished/reconstructed works are interesting exercises for the listener.
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Roehre
Originally posted by teamsaint View PostI have read the quite extensive sleeve notes on the Andrew Davis recording, which are certainly an interesting insight, although I suppose they do tend tell us what Payne wants us to know .
These completed/finished/reconstructed works are interesting exercises for the listener.
Interestingly a talk by Payne re Elgar 3 from 1995 released on a BBC Music magazine CD informs us that at that time he was convinced such a reconstruction based on the then known material was a near impossibillity.
The Elgar estate made it all possible.
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[QUOTE=ahinton;254106]Aside from the fact that Payne's concern is far more for the effect that the symphony will have on people whether or not they've read those notes before listening to it for the first time, they could hardly really do otherwise, could they?! Unless one made an in-depth study of all of the material and of Payne's notes and thoughts as he worked his way first to and then beyond the sheer impossibly of the task, those notes could do little else, I think.
This particular one strikes this particular listener as something rather more than that, actually!...[/QUOTE
I certainly wasn't suggesting that this is ONLY an interesting exercise.
Re the notes, again, it's just an observation that we try to put things the way we want them understood. That is natural and reasonable.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by Roehre View PostHis book(let) on his work on the Elgar gives much more and in-dept information, as does the NMC-CD accompanying Andrew Davis' recording. Together the book and this CD are an invaluable source looking "behind the scene" of Elgar "3".
Interestingly a talk by Payne re Elgar 3 from 1995 released on a BBC Music magazine CD informs us that at that time he was convinced such a reconstruction based on the then known material was a near impossibillity.
The Elgar estate made it all possible.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by Roehre View PostHis book(let) on his work on the Elgar gives much more and in-dept information, as does the NMC-CD accompanying Andrew Davis' recording. Together the book and this CD are an invaluable source looking "behind the scene" of Elgar "3".
Interestingly a talk by Payne re Elgar 3 from 1995 released on a BBC Music magazine CD informs us that at that time he was convinced such a reconstruction based on the then known material was a near impossibillity.
The Elgar estate made it all possible.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostWill do. found a used copy for about a fiver....can't go wrong.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostGood! Happy reading! As we approach the 15th anniversary of the world première of that symphony, I still cannot help but speculate that something else was at work in its preparation besides mere scholarship, dedication, commitment, familiarity with Elgar's work and composerly skills;
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I remember playing through the sketches that were published in Reed's book and improvising various passages, Elgar is one composer I can improvise in the style of, and thinking what I would do with the ideas if I was Elgar. One thing I do strongly disagree with in the completion is the ending. Yes it is right to end quietly, but I'm almost certain that Elgar wanted both slow movement and finale to end in the same way, extremely novel and daring and hence his reluctance to talk about it and his uncertainty about the position of the slow movement (2nd or 3rd). There are hints in the descending passage from the 'Arthur' music how that was to be achieved. All speculation of course, as we will never know, unless we come across a completed 3rd Symphony by an Elgar in a parallel universe!!!
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Originally posted by Suffolkcoastal View PostI remember playing through the sketches that were published in Reed's book and improvising various passages, Elgar is one composer I can improvise in the style of, and thinking what I would do with the ideas if I was Elgar. One thing I do strongly disagree with in the completion is the ending. Yes it is right to end quietly, but I'm almost certain that Elgar wanted both slow movement and finale to end in the same way, extremely novel and daring and hence his reluctance to talk about it and his uncertainty about the position of the slow movement (2nd or 3rd). There are hints in the descending passage from the 'Arthur' music how that was to be achieved. All speculation of course, as we will never know, unless we come across a completed 3rd Symphony by an Elgar in a parallel universe!!!
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostIirc it ends grandiosely - but someone can probably correct me. I have huge admiration for AP in daring, if one can so put it, to enter into the mindset of Elgar. My one doubt with the Payne construction comes midway through the slow movement. I remember during the 1995 talk Payne drawing attention to a point in that movement where the music provided modulates, ending the passage with a huge question mark never resolved in the sketches; yet Payne evidently chose to resolve this by a succeeding succession of modulations back into a safe key, if I'm not mistaken, (I'm going by aural memory!), re-entering the preceding discourse as though untroubled. I feel somehow let down at this solution, even at the same time as concluding that it would probably have proved an impossible task figuring out what Elgar might have had in mind.
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