well we've had Hindemith every afternoon this week, but I guess that's why you said "virtually ignored"
Paul Hindemith
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what would actually have been interesting would have been some discussion about his work and the reasons why it seems to have become less well regarded than it once was.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 Postwhat would actually have been interesting would have been some discussion about his work and the reasons why it seems to have become less well regarded than it once was.
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Even the handful of works played this week has been little compensation for his poor treatment at the hands of R3 this year. But following the recent patterns I've been monitoring, Hindemith is one of a number of composers who is clearly not in favour with the current regime, and one which they feel just needs a token representation to keep the critics at bay. Hindemith doesn't even look likely to even break the 50 pieces/chunks mark this year, unless there is a continued upsurge for the next couple of weeks.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post... Hindemith's music is probably regarded as too self-referential (i.e. developed from within itself and from its founding sources) to be of interest.
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Originally posted by rauschwerk View PostSurely it's for the BBC to broadcast it so that listeners can make their own minds up about that.
As someone who developed a non-excluding, as much as knowledge permitted all-encompassing fascination for classical music, particularly in its 20 century manifestations, I can't help but deplore the perpetuation of a major defect in coverage that dates back to times one once hoped were past, when other composers such as Vaughan Williams, Sibelius and Mahler were regarded as "outmoded" or "non-exportable" by broadcasters and shouldn't-be promoters.
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Originally posted by rauschwerk View PostSurely it's for the BBC to broadcast it so that listeners can make their own minds up about that.
The politicians don't like that sort of thing.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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Richard Barrett
I have a lot of time for Hindemith's early music but from Mathis der Maler onwards I gradually lose interest completely: his orchestration becomes pallid, with the strange exception of the Weber piece, and once he wrote his Craft of Musical Composition textbook his harmony seems always contrived to fit his own theory, rather than in the earlier music where he's making it up as he goes along and continually discovering new possibilities. The key pieces for me are the seven Kammermusik concertos and some of the early operas (Cardillac, Das Nusch-Nuschi and especially Sancta Susanna).
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostAs someone who developed a non-excluding, as much as knowledge permitted all-encompassing fascination for classical music, particularly in its 20 century manifestations, I can't help but deplore the perpetuation of a major defect in coverage that dates back to times one once hoped were past, when other composers such as Vaughan Williams, Sibelius and Mahler were regarded as "outmoded" or "non-exportable" by broadcasters and shouldn't-be promoters.
RVW, Sibelius and Mahler are no longer so regarded. And when they were "out of fashion", Hindemith's star was at its zenith; if he hasn't kept his position, isn't it more to do with performers just not finding his work very interesting? Britten, Bartok and Stravinsky have never wanted for performers to feature their work - why not Hindemith when, for over thirty years, he was at least quite as frequently featured as they were?
Fwiw, I don't mind the Hindemith I know (the Organ Sonatas, the works for Viola, the orchestral works, the Kammermusik - I was at Leeds when Ian Kemp was professor of Music there) - but it never "sticks" in my mind - I listen when it's performed, fnd it a pleasantly inoffensive way of passing the time, but I've never yet found myself thinking "What I really could do with now is a decent half-hour of Hindemith."
Now, Karl Amadeus Hartmann, by contrast ... bring it on![FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI have a lot of time for Hindemith's early music but from Mathis der Maler onwards I gradually lose interest completely: his orchestration becomes pallid, with the strange exception of the Weber piece, and once he wrote his Craft of Musical Composition textbook his harmony seems always contrived to fit his own theory, rather than in the earlier music where he's making it up as he goes along and continually discovering new possibilities. The key pieces for me are the seven Kammermusik concertos and some of the early operas (Cardillac, Das Nusch-Nuschi and especially Sancta Susanna).
Good to have you back, btw.Last edited by Serial_Apologist; 12-12-13, 23:47.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostBut ... but ... but ...
RVW, Sibelius and Mahler are no longer so regarded. And when they were "out of fashion", Hindemith's star was at its zenith; if he hasn't kept his position, isn't it more to do with performers just not finding his work very interesting? Britten, Bartok and Stravinsky have never wanted for performers to feature their work - why not Hindemith when, for over thirty years, he was at least quite as frequently featured as they were?
Fwiw, I don't mind the Hindemith I know (the Organ Sonatas, the works for Viola, the orchestral works, the Kammermusik - I was at Leeds when Ian Kemp was professor of Music there) - but it never "sticks" in my mind - I listen when it's performed, fnd it a pleasantly inoffensive way of passing the time, but I've never yet found myself thinking "What I really could do with now is a decent half-hour of Hindemith."
Now, Karl Amadeus Hartmann, by contrast ... bring it on!
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amateur51
Originally posted by teamsaint View Postpity R3 didn't invite you lot in with a few discs for an hour or two discussion.
But their loss is our gain.
Really very interesting stuff, many thanks.
Words and music breaking down barriers - perfect for radio and very Radio3
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