Originally posted by MrGongGong
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I found this comment
Gruppen is "a landmark in 20th-century music . . . probably the first work of the post-war generation of composers in which technique and imagination combine on the highest level to produce an undisputable masterpiece" (Smalley 1967, 794).
OK - so that's one composer's opinion, but is it that obvious? I have at least now rectified my more or less complete ignorance of the piece by listening, but it doesn't come out and hit me with its "undisputable" qualities. I'm not anti Stockhausen, and like some of his work, but what is it that makes some people thing this is a clear masterpiece?
I will listen again. At first listening I found Kurtag's Grabstein Für Stephan (Op. 15c) and the Suite with which Gruppen is coupled on Abbado's Berlin PO CD, slightly more appealing and easier. Of course easier doesn't necessarily equate with "better", but surely music has to be accessible enough that people other than the composer can at least start to appreciate it.
I will try again with Gruppen later.
What other (if any) works by Stockhausen would board members recommend?
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