Originally posted by Op. XXXIX
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Vaughan Williams, Ralph (1872-1958)
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Panjandrum
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostDuring the hay fever season, when the temperature is too high for confort, even in the shade, I listen to Sinfonia Antartica to cool down. Seriously, it really works.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Auferstehen2
Originally posted by EdgeleyRob View PostRVW symphonies. Why not start at the beginning and work your way through 1 to 9. It's a very rewarding journey.
Then you can start on the operas.
Incidentally, in message 15 I asked whether Vernon Handley is a good interpreter of these works - is the answer, "As good as any other British conductor"?
Best wishes,
MarioLast edited by Guest; 23-03-11, 22:39.
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Originally posted by Auferstehen2 View PostNo 1 apparently, is a mite tough.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostIt's a glorious celebration of the sea with luscious music and moving poetry by Walt Whitman. It's 70 minutes long, but with such beautiful music, who cares.
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Originally posted by Op. XXXIX View PostGlorious indeed. I remember hearing a performance on the radio and thinking at several junctures, VW must certainly have been familiar with Elgar's choral writing. (Not a criticism, just an observation.)
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I have a very special 10 inch LP of the RVW no 6 Symphony with Boult and the LSOwith a wonderful sleeve in gold and red with royal coats of arms and Nipper the dog in the middle. Only Rob and smittims can explain it to me as it was an odd recording, done with another orchestra when the scherzo was rewritten. It is a fantastic performance and my favourite of this symphony. BLP 1001 for those that like numbers!
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The real achievement of RVW's symphonies for me is how he tackles symphonic form and how different and often original the response is to the form in each of his symphonies. The 8th & 9th symphonies contain two highly original movements, the 1st of the 8th with its 'Variations in search of a theme; and the double movement finale of the 9th. RVW always manages to successfully solve the 'finale' problem which has been the bane of symphonic composers since Beethoven, a look through RVW's varied symphonic finales shows just what an achievement they are. I become more convinced with each day that he is not only this country's greatest symphonist but also one of the greatest symphonists of all time.
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Panjandrum
Originally posted by salymap View PostI wish RVW knew what people feel about his music now as, unlike some composers, he was always so modest about his achievements and ready to ask for opinions and suggestions from other professionals.
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Auferstehen2
Originally posted by Suffolkcoastal View PostRVW always manages to successfully solve the 'finale' problem which has been the bane of symphonic composers since Beethoven, a look through RVW's varied symphonic finales shows just what an achievement they are. I become more convinced with each day that he is not only this country's greatest symphonist but also one of the greatest symphonists of all time.
I am going to think about many symphonies' finales today and see where it gets me!
Mario
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I hope you find RVW as inspirational as I do Mario. He has long been and will probably always will be my favourite composer. The 'symphonic finale problem' would make an interesting subject for a thread. I think the RVW finales work so well because they perfectly sum up the whole work and are so deeply satisfying as a result they all subtely draw on thematic material from earlier in the given work. The main idea in the eerie pianissimo finale of no 6 for example is derived from the main idea of the 2nd subject group in the 1st movement.
Best wishes
SC
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Uncle Monty
Happy to echo all that, Sc. It wasn't until I practically bankrupted myself to get Lionel Pike's book on the symphonies, and took time to understand it properly, that I began to realise with my head what my heart had already told me, i.e. the scale of RVW's achievement, and the incredible craftsmanship and artistry. Gentleman amateur, indeed!
RVW almost never takes the easy option of the big ending, does he? You get very quick applause from a crash-bang finish, but he doesn't do that. I see that as integrity, and ultimately a firm belief in the validity and value of what he was doing, no matter how modest his demeanour about his work and the flutteriness about every significant new piece that led him to beg his friends to listen and comment before performance.Last edited by Guest; 24-03-11, 14:13.
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