Originally posted by ardcarp
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Michael Tippett (1905 - 98)
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I don't think that any commentator questioning Tippett's "technical accomplishment" today would be taken very seriously; the comparison with Britten (whose work I value more highly than Richard does) used to be made by critics who responded to the latter's seemingly effortless range of novel effects within an idiom that they could quickly comprehend and relate to previous traditions - and not always favourably: the "too clever by half" types of patronising comments that were a regular feature of early criticisms of Britten's works. With Tippett - whose Music was grounded as much in Elizabethan Music (which many critics of the time just didn't know as well as he did) as in Beethoven, and who constantly sought to expand the expressive resources (harmony, texture, rhythm, phrasing) to enable his Music to reflect and question the world in which he lived, and to which he reacted - new "technical" ideas, were needed for these new means of expression.
On single hearings, most critics couldn't hear what Tippett was doing; only that what they were expecting from what they understood as "technical accomplishment" wasn't (always) there in the Music - so, of course, they blamed the Music. Only gradually did it become clear that Tippett's "technique" was as exactly formed (as "accomplished") as was necessary to communicate what the Music had to "say" - and to empower the composer's lifelong need to explore further what his Music could be, and what it could do.
It's not unlike comparing the reputations of Mendelssohn and Berlioz - the latter similarly plagued with negative comments based on what critics were expecting from the Music, based on their experience with other Music, rather than attending to what the composer was actually achieving in his work, and how that could only be achieved through the different technical means that they created. A neat coincidence, then, that at least two of Tippett's principal supporters from the '60s on - Ian Kemp amd Colin Davis - were both also appreciative and enthusiastic proponents of Berlioz.Last edited by ferneyhoughgeliebte; 01-02-19, 09:42.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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By coincidence (I assume?) the incidental music of this week's R4 Extra Sci-Fi re-broadcast of the 1961 Orbit One Zero is taken from the Prelude of the Ritual Dances from The Midsummer Marriage. It was well chosen.
Why do producers never acknowledge the pieces they purloin?Pacta sunt servanda !!!
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Originally posted by edashtav View PostYour post #48 is splendid, ferney, and sets the scene for a proper reappraisal of Tippett's music 21 years after his death. We need fresh advocates and new recordings.
His symphonic oeuvre ranks in the top of its genre of any produced in the 20th century.
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Originally posted by Bella Kemp View PostIt's been a wonderful week so far. Some of you may enjoy this enthusiastic response to the second symphony:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/b01rw2kr
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Well I have to say I've certainly had my negative views about the "later" Tippett changed after this week's COTW, going admittedly by what we have heard. The performance of the first movement of the PC was a revelation, only having heard a live broadcast version in the mid-1960s which to me came across as an orchestral mush. In a way it's a shame that the COTW format didn't apparently facilitate comment on two of the later operas that totally confounded me when I heard them broadcast, "The Ice Break" and "New Year" - but others can doubtless vouch as to their importance in Tippett's oeuvre; and in any case, there are always going to be works within even a favourite composer that one is not going to get on with.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI used "admiration" as an understatement - Tippett's music is centrally important to me in many ways, as I've said on this forum many times - so please don't interpret that as anything less than "positively loving" it as you say you do! Yes, it's clear that Britten even in his early work shows a facility for writing stuff that many people would probably find pleasant, effective, unchallenging and so on, and that this is what is usually meant by "technical accomplishment", but the thing with Tippett's work, once he got into his stride in the 1950s, is that there's so much more at stake; it's a music that exists in order to express an entire view of the world and of humanity (and of music) which is challenging, which implicitly questions the idea of easy effectiveness and formal coherence, and for reasons like that has a value which any amount of facile and conventional notespinning by the Brittens of this world (especially of this country) and their musical descendants comes nowhere near, even if the result is that Tippett's vision remains misunderstood and unpopular.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Postthe comparison with Britten (whose work I value more highly than Richard does) used to be made by critics who responded to the latter's seemingly effortless range of novel effects within an idiom that they could quickly comprehend and relate to previous traditions -Last edited by ferneyhoughgeliebte; 02-02-19, 00:12.
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The Frank Bridge Variations, where Britten uses every string playing technique there is - arco, pizz, sul pont, harmonics, con sord, col legno; the sort of technique he may have discovered in his studies of the work of the Second Viennese School. (Compared with which, Tippett's Concerto for Double String Orchestra, finished a couple of years after Britten's work, is IIRC, entirely bowed.) The whistling and ad libitum "too-wit-a-woos" in the Spring Symphony. The use of cymbal crash tap0ed and played backwards in his Post Office scores. The "slung mugs" raindrops in Noye's Fludde. The "banjo" pizzicatos in Saint Nicolas.
For example.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostThe Frank Bridge Variations, where Britten uses every string playing technique there is - arco, pizz, sul pont, harmonics, con sord, col legno; the sort of technique he may have discovered in his studies of the work of the Second Viennese School. (Compared with which, Tippett's Concerto for Double String Orchestra, finished a couple of years after Britten's work, is IIRC, entirely bowed.) The whistling and ad libitum "too-wit-a-woos" in the Spring Symphony. The use of cymbal crash tap0ed and played backwards in his Post Office scores. The "slung mugs" raindrops in Noye's Fludde. The "banjo" pizzicatos in Saint Nicolas.
For example.
the synthesised breathing in MT's 4th Symphony, or the adoption of a "kitchen sink" battery of avant-garde percussion in his late scores. "Novel effects", a term implying that the effect is not intrinsic to the music to which it is somehow (mistakenly ?) applied, strikes me as faintly derogatory, & may as easily be described as an extension of a composer's musical vocabulary or an expansion of his or her sound-world.
Back to Tippett. Having now listened to the entire week's COTW, in a sort of box-set marathon, I'm now looking forward to Oliver Soden's biography. One observation -- in most of the vocal works, Heart's Assurance, Songs for Achilles, Byzantium, I became aware that my ear was invariably drawn to the piano, guitar, or orchestral accompaniment, rather than the singer's line, which could seem strangely undifferentiated. Is this a valid criticism ?
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Originally posted by Maclintick View Post"Novel effects", a term implying that the effect is not intrinsic to the music to which it is somehow (mistakenly ?) applied, strikes me as faintly derogatory, & may as easily be described as an extension of a composer's musical vocabulary or an expansion of his or her sound-world.
One observation -- in most of the vocal works, Heart's Assurance, Songs for Achilles, Byzantium, I became aware that my ear was invariably drawn to the piano, guitar, or orchestral accompaniment, rather than the singer's line, which could seem strangely undifferentiated. Is this a valid criticism ?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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