Malcolm Arnold
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostI'm really enjoying this week's CotW...catching up a couple of days in arrears. Wasn't the early string quartet (episode 1) extraordinary?
There is some discussion on the Composers sub-forum, but I thought I'd put a heads-up here.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00...pisodes/player
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostToday's double concerto, the last item, was a delight, and I would like to hear it again. What is interesting, and for me a revelation of the kind this programme is often so good at illuminating, is how the contradictions in the man play out in the music: those wonderful, beautifully realised passages that suddenly transition into something as corny as corny can be seeming to accurately reflect the cringeworthily embarrassing social situations referred to by Arnold's daughter and others.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostToday's double concerto, the last item, was a delight, and I would like to hear it again. What is interesting, and for me a revelation of the kind this programme is often so good at illuminating, is how the contradictions in the man play out in the music: those wonderful, beautifully realised passages that suddenly transition into something as corny as corny can be seeming to accurately reflect the cringeworthily embarrassing social situations referred to by Arnold's daughter and others.
I often wonder whether you have to have suffered some kind of mental illness (I have and still do)to really understand the man’s work.
Without being capable of explaining why,I think I do understand.
It’s as if he is saying,in music,this is how it is.
MA gives me the kick up the backside I probably need at times (I still take RVW as my anti depressants though).
Bit of a mish mash post but I can’t explain it any better“Music is the best means we have of digesting time." — Igor Stravinsky
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Originally posted by Edgy 2 View PostI’ve felt a deep connection to Arnold’s music for a long time.
I often wonder whether you have to have suffered some kind of mental illness (I have and still do)to really understand the man’s work.
Without being capable of explaining why,I think I do understand.
It’s as if he is saying,in music,this is how it is.
MA gives me the kick up the backside I probably need at times (I still take RVW as my anti depressants though).
Bit of a mish mash post but I can’t explain it any better
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Originally posted by Edgy 2 View PostI often wonder whether you have to have suffered some kind of mental illness (I have and still do)to really understand the man’s work.
What is, I think, more important is that this Music "speaks" to you, and "connects" with emotions, experiences, and ideas that you have suffered (as well as many that you have enjoyed and which have helped you through those heavy days) - that's what I think matters, and why the Arts (and, perhaps Music in particular) is so essential to people's lives. Literally: of the "essence" of being alive - there, with us, particularly when it feels as if we are abandoned with and by even ourselves. (And, of course, when we feel most attached to Life and wish to celebrate it - feelings which I deeply wish and hope for you, old chum. )[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Stokowski was the only great 'international' maestro at the time to conduct any of Arnold's music. His 1954 BBC Maida Vale radio broadcast of "Beckus" was hailed by the composer as a "wonderful performance," words echoed by a comment under its YouTube upload ...
In the early 1950s, the BBC engaged Leopold Stokowski to conduct several radio broadcasts from their Maida Vale studio during his regular visits to London. H...
"Stunning and rousing"!
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OMG the final episode was a bit dark. I knew about Arnold's alcoholism and (probably associated) mental health problems but I didn't realise he had a violent side to the women in his life. But one must (a) have sympathy for him as well as those who had to cope with him, and (b) separate the man's behaviour from his music. He was obviously one of those highly gifted people from whom music flowed straight from his head (soul?) onto the m/s paper. And his grasp of orchestration was sans pareil. I think upthread someone made an allusion to Mahler. Yes in the sense that an apparently 'banal' motif will crop up amongst the heavy stuff.
My Christmas CD bucket list is now going to include Hickox/LSO and Arnold/CBSO.
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Oh dear visualnickmos. Please don't be offended by my post #36. It was meant as a lighthearted criticism of the forum and its ways. You are quite right; we have deviated from the thread title. I do hope you'll stay and put us back on course. BTW, I thought this week's CotW exemplified this excellent programme at its best. Do let us have your views on it and on Malcolm Arnold.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI don't think that Music "works" like this, though, Edgy - doesn't it "limit" the "reach" of the Music, and therefore its importance? And won't there be many people who have "suffered some type of mental illness" who can't stand Arnold's Music?
What is, I think, more important is that this Music "speaks" to you, and "connects" with emotions, experiences, and ideas that you have suffered (as well as many that you have enjoyed and which have helped you through those heavy days) - that's what I think matters, and why the Arts (and, perhaps Music in particular) is so essential to people's lives. Literally: of the "essence" of being alive - there, with us, particularly when it feels as if we are abandoned with and by even ourselves. (And, of course, when we feel most attached to Life and wish to celebrate it - feelings which I deeply wish and hope for you, old chum. )
I’m not really any good at explaining myself,not even sure what I’m trying to say half the time
Whatever,his music more than speaks to me.
I listen to,for example,the Lento slow movement of the 2nd Symphony and think,yep Malcolm,you’ve hit the nail on the head,I’ve been there“Music is the best means we have of digesting time." — Igor Stravinsky
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Originally posted by visualnickmos View PostI think I'm going to take a break from this forum for a while. Not that anyone will notice. It has, I feel, become rather a 'you're in ' or 'you're out' gang. I'm definitely not feeling 'in'
It can be annoying when a Thread wanders "off-topic" - what I usually do in cases like this is "trim" off the OT posts and give them their own Thread, provided that there are enough posts to suggest that people would like the space to discuss it further, and leave the original Thread on-topic. I've been at concerts in Huddersfield, so haven't been able to do this today.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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