Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte
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Brahms ... inexplicable innit
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I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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I'm going to use stodgy - Brahms was dull and lacking in emotional content then suddenly everything changed, Gawd alone knows why and I get him. Britten on the other hand was always semi- attached because my wife performed so much of his music and I got used to the Pears tones but BB remains half-loved.
Last Thursday I listened to the broadcast of Brahms 4th and it made me feel (again) that no one presents a symphonic argument like Johannes. He's peerless. Excuse my enthusiasm.
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Originally posted by kea View PostI've seen a few people claim to find Brahms too dry, academic, austere, introverted, difficult, etc—not relatable enough. The slow movements are particularly cited.
I don't subscribe to this view (and Op. 36 is desert island music for me) but perhaps those who do could elaborate, if there are any hereabouts.
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This is a very interesting thread. Thanks to Calum for starting it.
I have gone through some periods when I found myself disliking large parts of Brahms ouvre, but not in the past several years. i used to think that the Symphonies could sound thick and clotted in their Orchestration, but after exposure to several recorded cycles where care was displayed with the inner voices and cross rhythms, I have come to fully appreciate the music. Currently I am enjoying the Manze cycle, in which the chamber sized orchestra and SACD recording keeps the textures sparkingly transparent.
I haven't listened to the sextets in years. I don't actually have a recording of them. What other recordings do people recommend?
Reportedly the Boston Symphony concert hall in the late 19th century had a axe that was to be used in case of fire that someone had written "Use in case of Brahms" underneath. He has always had his detractors.
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostI haven't listened to the sextets in years. I don't actually have a recording of them. What other recordings do people recommend?I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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Thanks to Tevot for linking to that perf of the 2nd Sextet - strong foreshadowing of Schoenberg's Verklaerte Nacht towards the end of the third movement in those pedal points, I thought. I don't have much knowledge of Brahms's music - that was a first hearing. Must get out some of the piano music sometimes, of which my mum, a virtuoso who could have had a career in public performance had she not put marriage first, as many of course then did, left me lots.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by gradus View Postno one presents a symphonic argument like Johannes.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostI am envious of your attendance at the concert, jazzer.
Brahms more than anybody else is the composer I return to to reground, refocus, or whatever.
If Beethoven does the music in heaven, Brahms will have to do his weekends off.
And the Sextets..........I don't have the words......actually you don't need words, just ears.
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Roehre
Originally posted by gradus View PostMaybe you're right about 'argument' and I can see why it can get in the way but to me there is so much passion in his music - 'inexplicable innit'.
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Brahms and Dire Straits
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostThere was a discussion about this is an episode of Music Weekly yonks ago (Michael Oliver was presenting!) and IIRC, the most frequently-cited reasons that people who didn't like Brahms gave for their antipathy were (first) his frequent use of 2 against 3 cross-rhythms (which made them literally feel nauseous) .
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostSee, this is part of the problem as far as Im concerned. Music that seems (as Brahms's does) to invite description in terms of "argument" turns me right off.
There seems to me to be no space in it for the irrational, the unbalanced (I mean in structural terms but it could equally be applied in expressive terms), the excessive, the uncertain or unknown...
And he can so take the piss out of himself: the Coda of the Second Symphony (after the "Wagnerian" Horn solo that Roehre mentions there is a over-lush string melody - which is immediately followed by a insolent "Ooh, get her" parody. (The conclusion of the First String Sextet does something similar - a "profound" version of the First Group theme, poised between pomposity and sentimentality, is immediately cancelled with a concluding "Yeah, sure; who wants a beer?" dismissal.)
I guess that could be a positive quality for some!
Oh - and the glorious klang of the stuff, too!Last edited by ferneyhoughgeliebte; 08-03-14, 11:25.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Beresford View PostInteresting - I have always had a strong reaction against Brahms music; I don't understand why - I know he's good. I get the same reaction to Dire Straits. Is there some structural similarity? I had guessed that it was something about descending runs.
Though even I will admit that Romeo and Juliet (especially sung by Steve Knightly) and Sultans of Swing are good songs.
I think it may be about need. I don't think there is anything I need from Dire Straits,but there is from Brahms or Alex Harvey.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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