Originally posted by Bryn
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Stravinsky, Igor Fyodorovich (1882-1971)
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Originally posted by Quarky View PostThe music of Agon obviously does stand alone, but I feel many of his ballet scores need to be seen as a ballet production for full enjoyment. ....And then there is Scenes de Ballet ......
Please excuse my waffling on...
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Originally posted by Quarky View PostThere may be an issue with some of his Ballet scores, the lesser known ballets. Obviously, the great ballets, Rite etc, are musical works that stand on their own feet as great works of art.
However Ballets are a joint production with the Choreographer, and particularly with modern productions, the production will stand or fall by the quality of the Choreography. I'm thinking of Balanchine and Agon for example - please don't open this clip if you don't like Dance: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1fZCdTFPiUs
The music of Agon obviously does stand alone, but I feel many of his ballet scores need to be seen as a ballet production for full enjoyment. ....And then there is Scenes de Ballet ......
Please excuse my waffling on...
Some find the music of the Pas de deux, where the solo trumpet (male dancer) is imitated by solo horn (female dancer), brash, vulgar, and incongruous (White again): but I love it!
This is the piece that resulted in this lovely story (taken from White, again).
After the first night, Stravinsky received a telegram couched in the following terms:
YOUR MUSIC GREAT SUCCESS STOP COULD BE SENSATIONAL SUCCESS IF YOU WOULD AUTHORISE ROBERT RUSSELL BENNETT RETOUCH ORCHESTRATION STOP BENNETT ORCHESTRATES EVEN THE WORKS OF COLE PORTER
Stravinsky telegraphed back:
SATISFIED WITH GREAT SUCCESS
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostSome find the music of the Pas de deux, where the solo trumpet (male dancer) is imitated by solo horn (female dancer), brash, vulgar, and incongruous
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View Post... with its wonderful four opening chords (spaced with cunning irregularity: White, in his book) that give no hint at all of the basic compound 5/8 that it settles down into!
Some find the music of the Pas de deux, where the solo trumpet (male dancer) is imitated by solo horn (female dancer), brash, vulgar, and incongruous (White again): but I love it!
This is the piece that resulted in this lovely story (taken from White, again).
After the first night, Stravinsky received a telegram couched in the following terms:
YOUR MUSIC GREAT SUCCESS STOP COULD BE SENSATIONAL SUCCESS IF YOU WOULD AUTHORISE ROBERT RUSSELL BENNETT RETOUCH ORCHESTRATION STOP BENNETT ORCHESTRATES EVEN THE WORKS OF COLE PORTER
Stravinsky telegraphed back:
SATISFIED WITH GREAT SUCCESS
Apparently Scénes de ballet was recently revived by Christopher Wheeldon - so who knows it might be performed in the future on the London Stage (Lockdown permitting)
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI would also include what many Stravinsky enthusiasts regard as a "slight" work, the Ebony Concerto, for its anticipating the essence of Cool jazz, a good five years ahead of Miles Davis' and Gil Evans' Birth of the Cool, upon whose harmonic textures and instrumental combinations I detect its influence.
It seems Stravinsky wrote a number of Jazz-inspired pieces - RagTime worthy of note....Last edited by Quarky; 30-08-20, 08:27.
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Originally posted by Quarky View PostAgreed - good fun! Doubtful whether Robert Russell Bennett would have "improved" it.
Apparently Scénes de ballet was recently revived by Christopher Wheeldon - so who knows it might be performed in the future on the London Stage (Lockdown permitting)
(I was trying to find the date they did it, as part of their Stravinsky offerings.)
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Originally posted by Quarky View PostListening again to Ebony Concerto
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI was listening to that the other day, Stravinsky's own recording with Benny Goodman and the Columbia Jazz Ensemble, followed by Boulez's with the Ensemble InterContemporain, which, to quote an eminent colleague of mine in another context, "swings like a bucket of sh*t". Boulez for his own part used words like "une sorte d'onanisme en public" to describe jazz, so you wouldn't expect much more I suppose.
That's a shame about Boulez, since - as you know I've pointed out before - his Derive 2 is not unjazzlike in at least a few respects and particular passages.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI was listening to that the other day, Stravinsky's own recording with Benny Goodman and the Columbia Jazz Ensemble, followed by Boulez's with the Ensemble InterContemporain, which, to quote an eminent colleague of mine in another context, "swings like a bucket of sh*t". Boulez for his own part used words like "une sorte d'onanisme en public" to describe jazz, so you wouldn't expect much more I suppose. I think it's a lovely piece - the only thing wrong with it (as with Symphonies of Winds) is that it's over so soon.
ISRT that Pristine transferred it to the digital domaiin but it seems no longer to be in their catalogue.
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Last edited by Quarky; 01-09-20, 09:22.
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Originally posted by Bryn View Post
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Moving on... another piece I've spent some considerable time with in recent weeks is the Cantata, which seems to be considered to be a problematic work: the refrains are too repetitive, the central aria is too long, and besides its text contains antisemitic sentiments. I don't really agree with the first two criticisms, but the third is more difficult to deal with: it may be a mediaeval text, but Stravinsky's well-documented antipathy towards Jewish people and his insensitivity in setting it in a piece written soon after the second world war do strike me as something that needs addressing. Robert Craft has claimed that he replaced the offending words of the text in his first performance in Los Angeles and was berated for this by WH Auden (who had given Stravinsky the anthology from which he drew his text); Stravinsky's manager assured a correspondent in 1971 that Craft would ensure that the emended text would appear in any future republication of the score, which he didn't. What's to be done? (& should any possible solution also apply for example to JS Bach's setting of Luther's words about "the murderous Pope and Turks"?)
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostMoving on... another piece I've spent some considerable time with in recent weeks is the Cantata, which seems to be considered to be a problematic work: the refrains are too repetitive, the central aria is too long, and besides its text contains antisemitic sentiments. I don't really agree with the first two criticisms, but the third is more difficult to deal with: it may be a mediaeval text, but Stravinsky's well-documented antipathy towards Jewish people and his insensitivity in setting it in a piece written soon after the second world war do strike me as something that needs addressing. Robert Craft has claimed that he replaced the offending words of the text in his first performance in Los Angeles and was berated for this by WH Auden (who had given Stravinsky the anthology from which he drew his text); Stravinsky's manager assured a correspondent in 1971 that Craft would ensure that the emended text would appear in any future republication of the score, which he didn't. What's to be done? (& should any possible solution also apply for example to JS Bach's setting of Luther's words about "the murderous Pope and Turks"?)
PS: Looking at available versions has prompted my memory.
I think it was the St Mary's Edinburgh version, and that Gabriel Jackson was involved in some way (he might have written the liner notes).
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