Originally posted by Barbirollians
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Schoenberg, Arnold (1874-1951)
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostMy take on the issue is that after Pelleas Schoenberg started absorbing much more from Mahler in this matter of orchestral pallette, as well as in other areas of expression and idiom - as I think did Zemlinsky, btw.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI would agree with that. I find it one of Schoenberg's least convincing scores. It (again like the Zemlinsky) sprawls horizontally as well as vertically, in contrast to most of Schoenberg's music which even at this early stage shows a strong tendency towards concision.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostWondering if Gurrelieder would also appeal to the hypothetical granny
My Gran would ask for Gurrelieder as a sort of 'aural nightcap' before retiring, having had an early evening of Pelleas....and ....Nacht. But she'd pull the plug out of the socket if she ever caught me playing any of that 'horrible' Moses Und Aron or the String Quartets. When i tried to explain that they were the work of the same bloke, she'd respond 'Well, now he's just trying to be clever!'
Likewise, Coltrane's Giant Step and Miles' Kind Of Blue were very popular with her; but she threatened to cut me out of her will when she caught me playing Ascenion and Live Evil.
:)
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Originally posted by Conchis View PostMy Gran would ask for Gurrelieder as a sort of 'aural nightcap' before retiring, having had an early evening of Pelleas....and ....Nacht. But she'd pull the plug out of the socket if she ever caught me playing any of that 'horrible' Moses Und Aron or the String Quartets. When i tried to explain that they were the work of the same bloke, she'd respond 'Well, now he's just trying to be clever!'
Likewise, Coltrane's Giant Step and Miles' Kind Of Blue were very popular with her; but she threatened to cut me out of her will when she caught me playing Ascenion and Live Evil.
:)
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostEven in Karajan’s recording where the orchestration has never struck me as murky ?
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Originally posted by Conchis View PostSome people (I don't necessarily agree with them) think HvK smooths over the rought edges of Schoenberg's scores, turning them into 'Karajan puree' if not actual 'Karajan soup.'
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Have been listening to Barbirolli's late 1960s account of Pelleas and Melisande with the Philharmonia this afternoon and again the orchestration seems pretty transparent and lacking in murkiness to me . I had to look it up but I was reminded of what the late Michael Oliver wrote about P and M in Gramophone. Though he was referring to the HVK recording . To paraphrase he said the point was not that Schoenberg failed in his attempt to develop further the worlds of Wagner and Richard Strauss's tone poems but that he came so close to succeeding and in doing so " forged many of the tools that he would need later" .
The Barbirolli account goes for the full blooded approach with some of Sir John's singalong thrown in ! .
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostHave been listening to Barbirolli's late 1960s account of Pelleas and Melisande with the Philharmonia this afternoon and again the orchestration seems pretty transparent and lacking in murkiness to me . I had to look it up but I was reminded of what the late Michael Oliver wrote about P and M in Gramophone. Though he was referring to the HVK recording . To paraphrase he said the point was not that Schoenberg failed in his attempt to develop further the worlds of Wagner and Richard Strauss's tone poems but that he came so close to succeeding and in doing so " forged many of the tools that he would need later" .
The Barbirolli account goes for the full blooded approach with some of Sir John's singalong thrown in ! .
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostOddly enough I have never had the same problem with the orchestration of "Gurrelieder", notwithstanding the even larger forces in use
I can't find it on Qobuz unfortunately, so I've gone for Boulez's second recording, made at a concert in 2003 with the Gustav Mahler Jugendorchester (who make an absolutely wonderful sound, easily the equal of most professional orchestras). I think the murkiness I've been mentioning isn't "bad orchestration" as such, since it's possible to hear everything, in as far as one can really say that without a score to hand, but an overabundance of foreground and not enough perspective, so that it sometimes feels like you're hearing all the themes all the time.Last edited by Richard Barrett; 19-03-18, 19:51.
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Yesterday evening I abandoned Cambreling's Moses und Aron as too soft-focused and clinical, and launched instead into Solti's, which I'd never heard before. Obviously it's intensely dramatic, and the pairing of Franz Mazura (who really sounds at the beginning like he's tired of divine revelations and wants to get back to his sheep) and Philip Langridge seems perfect. This will be the one for me from now on. I always used to like the first Boulez recording but it does show its age in terms of sonic clarity, and his second is beautiful in many ways but you need a native German speaker for Moses and David Pittman-Jennings is a big letdown as far as I'm concerned.
Previously, I continued to work my way through the big Boulez box - the Serenade (hasn't been bettered as far as I know), Verklärte Nacht (the sextet version, not my favourite performance of this which would be the LaSalle Quartet and friends), 3 Pieces for Chamber Orchestra (fascinating), 5 Pieces op.16 and Variations op.31 (both of which I wasn't paying sufficient attention to). More later on today I think.
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Schoenberg's Style and Idea gave us a pretty clear notion of where his ideas on composition and where music was going at the time of its writing (late 1940s). I am overjoyed at having found this text, which has taken me a couple of days to read through, but without which I would not have been. It includes the essay "On revient toujours" in which he acknowledges returning to pre-serial, pre-atonal idioms with just a hint of coyness: there are opinions here that many, including me, will disagree with of course, but in the light of Schoenberg's reputed absence of humour or self-criticism, these qualities are there for anyone to read in this text.
Here is the link to the entire thesis, if I'm not mistaken:
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