Originally posted by Serial_Apologist
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Arnold Schoenberg: 02–05.01.2017; 09–13.09.2024
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It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI don't know anyone who has written using the variety of methods it offers who has this "opinion"
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI'm sure you do. You hear very many composers of the second half of the twentieth century who would echo words like these (from Rautavaara): "This music wrenched itself free (and liberated me) from the serial straitjacket and quasi-scientific thinking..." and similar.
I was tautologically meaning that I didn't know of any composer who produced a corpus of work using the variety of methods serialism offers has found it "restrictive".[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostYes, indeed
I was tautologically meaning that I didn't know of any composer who produced a corpus of work using the variety of methods serialism offers has found it "restrictive".
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostWell, he was much better when working with Music he didn't revere as much as he did Bach - the "Monn" 'cello Concerto and (especially) the Handel S4tet Concerto - the irony and mischief so lacking from the Bach transcriptions is here in spades. And the Strauss arrangements, too - retaining the graceful lyricism, but with the acidity of the chamber ensemble to offset the sugar (and closer to both Johanns' own instrumental forces when they began their careers).
I prefer to listen to the Brahms Pno 4tet orchestration than to the Bachs, but don't enjoy the experience nearly as much as those from the Monn and Handel arrangements.
I don't know the Schubert, Mahler, Reger, Busoni arrangements that he made for his Society for Private Musical Performance - but altogether, his arrangement add up to more than three hours of performance time - and I think they shed light on Arnie, if not on the works themselves (which is fine by me) and a bit more than a "tiny ... part of his output"?
www.amazon.dewww.soundandmusic.comwww.ibs.itwww.jpc.deGustav MahlerDAS LIED VON DER ERDE,Detmolder Kammerorchester, arr. for Chamber Ensemble (Schönberg\Rieh...
As for Reger's "Romantic Suite", Schoenberg's gorgeously sensuous orchestration of the opening whole-tone scale harmonised passage almost lends the music an Impressionist, almost Debussyan character, similar to the start and conclusion of the first of the Berg "Sieben Frühe Lieder" - again, in this I sense a bit of tongue-in-cheek:
Max Reger: Eine romantische Suite, Op. 125arranged by Arnold Schönberg (1920)performed by Soloists of the Opéra National de Lyon (1994)----In my opinion one ...
Enjoy?!
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI can't help wondering if the "heaviness" in the orchestration in Schoenberg's arrangement of the Brahms amounted to tongue-in-cheek, a commentary on Brahms's orchestral manner of scoring
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostAm I correct in thinking Schoenberg was one of those originally aproached for the "completion" of Mahler 9, but that he turned it down due to preoccupations elsewhere? It has sometimes been opined that Schoengerg would have made a mockery (perhaps too strong a word) of the Mahler, wrongly, imv, citing the Monn and Handel arrangements (which were in fact radical reconstructions couched in his own musical vocabulary circa 1906) as examples of the composer making these works into his own.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostDon't you dare!!! The last time I was rude about Godowski your comments shamed me so much that I spent a month chasing up examples on youTube to see if I could accommodate your enthusiasm. In all that time, I managed to hear one transcription that I thought was lovely - for the rest, it was a singularly painful effort, which I wouldn't want to repeat again - and, in fact, these days I have a note (and a prescription) from my GP excusing me from such dangerously high systolic encounters.
I tried - I really tried - but not nearly as much as I was tried; and subsequent encounters with his work on broadcasts have only confirmed that this repertoire and I cannot reach agreement at ACAS.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI'm sure you do. You hear very many composers of the second half of the twentieth century who would echo words like these (from Rautavaara): "This music wrenched itself free (and liberated me) from the serial straitjacket and quasi-scientific thinking..." and similar.
That said, it's worth remembering that Schönberg himself, having arrived at the point at which he would compose works using principles of serial dodecaphony, continued to write "tonal" music not using such procedures when he felt that it suited him to do so (sketches for string quartet, various canons, &c. as well as the better known ones).
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Very good series this . As ever amazed by the range of AS’s music . So much I haven’t heard before or in a long time on R3. Among the former a short piece composed for his fellow soldiers complete with bugle calls . He was a supremely witty composer- far from the dry pedagogue some think him.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostIndeed, and there are his cabaret songs, which sadly, I think , weren't performed where they were intended. His letters and prose articles are pepppered with a very Jewish humour , irony etc. tothe fore. And there's his famous self-portrait which shows him walking away.
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