I'm enjoying it, too, and I'm not blaming anyone except whoever did the research. The mistakes we've spotted are such simple things, nothing esoteric. It just seems strange.
Benjamin Britten w/c 18 November 2013
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by mercia View PostI don't want to turn into a sad mistake-spotter, but I think we were just told that in the Prologue to the Serenade for TH&S the horn is offstageLast edited by mercia; 20-11-13, 18:27.
Comment
-
-
Listening just now to "Abraham and Isaac", I am once more struck by Britten's showing the best of himself as a straightforward, mor-or-less diatonic composer. The only objection I find in the idiom is the composer's heavyhanded resort to contrary motion, probably assumed from misunderstanding Bartok's usage. (No constructivist, our Mr Britten!) In the excerpt he used simple intervals, depending as in Holst on what dissonance results from "unorthodox" modal scales; there is none of the gratuitous use of bitonality signalling Britten's self-consciously adopted modernism (which he always attributed to his teacher Bridge, for whom bitonality was integral to a weakening of tonal functions in the later works). And yet! - that Britten could so easily have let loose at various points, (note the third quartet!), is admirably demonstrated in the brilliant opening depicting the awakening of spring in the Spring Symphony - which thereafter so soon goes downhill into triteness and twee!
Comment
-
-
We had the whole of Abraham and Isaac, a substantial chunk of Turn of the Screw, but only passing mentions for Billy Budd and Gloriana. Various bits of gossip. It must be difficult to make programmes like these balanced, but I don't quite understand the thinking behind this. I suppose five hours just isn't enough time to give a real impression of any composer's work.
Very good Abraham from Rolfe Johnson, lovely sound from Michael Chance as Isaac, but I hope his words were clearer than they seemed to be on my radio.
SA, I don't find the Spring Symphony 'trite and twee'!
Comment
-
-
I'm intrigued by your analysis of Britten's compositional techniques in Abraham and Isaac, S-A. Just one thing to add, maybe. The text (a Mystery Play) was of the people and for the people and appealed to Britten precisely because of its lack of sophistication. (An example: as Abraham is about to stab Isaac he says, "To do this I am sorrye") I think Britten, above all tried to match the naivety of text with a certain naivety of musical style (call it faux naivete if you must).
I think it is a terrific piece, and I've seen audiences genuinely moved by it.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by ardcarp View PostI'm intrigued by your analysis of Britten's compositional techniques in Abraham and Isaac, S-A. Just one thing to add, maybe. The text (a Mystery Play) was of the people and for the people and appealed to Britten precisely because of its lack of sophistication. (An example: as Abraham is about to stab Isaac he says, "To do this I am sorrye") I think Britten, above all tried to match the naivety of text with a certain naivety of musical style (call it faux naivete if you must).
I think it is a terrific piece, and I've seen audiences genuinely moved by it.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Mary Chambers View PostI don't find the Spring Symphony 'trite and twee'!
Comment
-
-
I wonder what Britten's position on hunting with hounds would have been...
1 February 2025... Peter Warlock news, gossip, photos of Peter Warlock, biography, Peter Warlock girlfriend list 2025. Relationship history. Peter Warlock relationship list. Peter Warlock dating history, 2025, 2024, list of Peter Warlock relationships.
4 minutes 22 seconds in.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI wonder what Britten's position on hunting with hounds would have been...
1 February 2025... Peter Warlock news, gossip, photos of Peter Warlock, biography, Peter Warlock girlfriend list 2025. Relationship history. Peter Warlock relationship list. Peter Warlock dating history, 2025, 2024, list of Peter Warlock relationships.
4 minutes 22 seconds in.
I can't get that link.
Apparently in his last year at prep school Britten wrote an anti-hunting essay (the subject was 'Animals'), and extended it to include attacking other people in war. He got into trouble for it.
'Who are These Children?' composed 1969, also sets an anti-hunting poem.
Comment
-
Comment