Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte
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Simpson, Robert (1921-1997)
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostBut he wasn't, Bbm - he followed just two years of a Medical course (another four years' study before he could get his 2nd MB - the equivalent of dropping a Biology course after the second year: a bit more than "A"-level, but not yet a Degree) before moving to composition at Durham University, where he became a Doctor ... of Music.
I will never forget the chat we had with RS about his work Energy for brass band. Such insights he gave into this work.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostSo last night I returned as promised to Simpson's 9th Symphony, finding a bit more in it this time, and also listened to his illustrated talk at the end of the CD which is quite interesting. It's clear from the music that he really is thinking in terms of fugues, chorale preludes, "rustling accompaniments", organising climaxes and so on, but hearing him talking about them is a bit like listening to a voice from a bygone age, as if all of the metamorphoses of musical thinking undergone by his generation simply hadn't taken place. Obviously this doesn't come from ignorance, since at the BBC he would have come across more cutting-edge music than most; it's a rejection of or indifference to the music of his own time during a period when that music was at its most vital and creative. This isn't Simpson-bashing, just musing on what I find a strange attitude.Last edited by ahinton; 03-10-17, 15:14.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostEarlier this morning I listened to Simpson's symphony #10. It has always been my least favorite of his symphonies, but today I really enjoyed it.
I'm grateful for the existence of this thread. I don't think RS is ever going to be one of my favourite composers but, as a result of (both sides of) the discussion here I've felt impelled to listen again to and reassess not just his music but also my reaction to it, and at least in the case of his 9th Symphony come to an appreciation of some aspects of it which I hadn't previously cottoned on to. For me, something to come back to at some other time.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostWouldn't you admit though that the beginning is a bit, er, shouty?
I'm grateful for the existence of this thread. I don't think RS is ever going to be one of my favourite composers but, as a result of (both sides of) the discussion here I've felt impelled to listen again to and reassess not just his music but also my reaction to it, and at least in the case of his 9th Symphony come to an appreciation of some aspects of it which I hadn't previously cottoned on to. For me, something to come back to at some other time.
The way I am, I get shouted at quite a lot so I didn't notice anything untoward in the beginning of the ninth
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