Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur
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Simpson, Robert (1921-1997)
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostI don't think it's about taste. Simpson's neglect is measurable. Rubbra, Rawsthorne et al have not enjoyed similar neglect. The fact that Simpson is a composer of stellar talent is indisputable. Whether one likes his music is another question. My opening sentence was a rhetorical question, anyway.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI note that the name of the guest violist on the Quintet could easily be the answer President Trump would give to the question "what do you do at the weekends when it's not golfing weather?" (I'll get my coat.)
I might have a go at some of Simpson's chamber music instead. Partly because some moments of that 9th Symphony seem despite everything to have lodged themselves in my memory.
Originally posted by makropulos View PostIt is entirely a matter of taste: you can't claim that Simpson's "stellar talent is indisputable" and expect people just to believe it as a given - plenty of people here obviously don't hear it that way and I, for one, simply don't share your opinion about Simpson's talent. In short, it's not at all "indisputable".
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Originally posted by makropulos View PostIt is entirely a matter of taste: you can't claim that Simpson's "stellar talent is indisputable" and expect people just to believe it as a given - plenty of people here obviously don't hear it that way and I, for one, simply don't share your opinion about Simpson's talent. In short, it's not at all "indisputable".
And remember, most people in the world don't like, and aren't interested in the music that we people like.
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Originally posted by makropulos View PostIt is entirely a matter of taste: you can't claim that Simpson's "stellar talent is indisputable" and expect people just to believe it as a given - plenty of people here obviously don't hear it that way and I, for one, simply don't share your opinion about Simpson's talent. In short, it's not at all "indisputable".
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostI don't expect people to believe Simpson's talent as a given. I am assuming that people will have listened to the music and recognised the fact, whether they like the music or not. Boris Johnson is an extraordinarily talented and bright bloke, but I for one ain't keen on him.
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Originally posted by edashtav View PostI'm conflicted when writing about "our" Bob: he was a good critic and his views on Nielsen, Bruckner and Brian were pillars of wisdom that shaped, and still sustain, my views of these composers. I sense that many on this board are Bob's children and his best work may have been done in the programming committee of the Third Programme. I have many LPs and CDs of Robert Simpson's works: in the main his symphonies. They have an honoured place on my shelves but when push comes to shove whilst my hands stop at his discs, my brain says, "Ed, move on, you have learned all that you're going to learn from that source." Bob was fascinated by the stellar whether in the firmament or within his fellow composers. I'm with makropulos, his own music shows talent but rarely, for me, escapes from earth's gravity.
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Originally posted by ThropplenogginThe 'New' Radio 3 Forum is depressingly similar to the old one when this thread's poster is around. Can't the Mods do anything about him?
I just wish that he'd be a bit gentler with some Forumistas who disagreed with him. Please.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostVery interesting. I'm not understanding the learning bit, though. We move on from a composer or his music when we feel we've learnt? And what does music have to have in order to escape Earth's gravity?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by edashtav View PostI sense that many on this board are Bob's children
Last night I listened to the CD with Quartet no.12 and Quintet no.1, again not getting through either work to the end. I think there's something about twentieth-century fugues that turns me off, and there seems to be a great deal of that kind of thing in both works. I'm glad that this music exists, if that doesn't sound condescending - it's obviously deeply committed and thoughtful, and its composer seems to have been a person of great integrity in every way (though I don't share his musical enthusiasms that much, with the exception of Bruckner), and with quite a few people it clearly communicates strongly. I don't think I'm likely to become one of them... not yet anyway.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostVery interesting. I'm not understanding the learning bit, though. We move on from a composer or his music when we feel we've learnt? And what does music have to have in order to escape Earth's gravity?
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThere I was thinking he led a fairly quiet life.
Last night I listened to the CD with Quartet no.12 and Quintet no.1, again not getting through either work to the end. I think there's something about twentieth-century fugues that turns me off, and there seems to be a great deal of that kind of thing in both works. I'm glad that this music exists, if that doesn't sound condescending - it's obviously deeply committed and thoughtful, and its composer seems to have been a person of great integrity in every way (though I don't share his musical enthusiasms that much, with the exception of Bruckner), and with quite a few people it clearly communicates strongly. I don't think I'm likely to become one of them... not yet anyway.
I have the Hyperion Simpson symphony set, but can't say I have played all the CDs; might be something to do now R3 is so dire in the mornings.
Any thoughts on his Piano concerto, which I have on a BBC Radio Classics CD (Carlton), c/w Rawsthorne PC2 and Concerto for two pianos?
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Originally posted by edashtav View PostStellar music, the music of the spheres, keeps on giving, Beefo, earthbound music isn't transcendental, is it? What Bob's music needs to escape earth's shackles is not more or better form but better substance: his materials are unmemorable and tend to be short ... and then... and then... he works them to death in a manner that that is hectoring rather than Hector-like. In the end, they crash back to earth like failed satellites.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostGreat shout, BBM
Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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