Originally posted by Petrushka
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Bruckner 7
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Roehre
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by Petrushka View Postthe shocking event of which would surely have been seen by modern day composers (albeit on TV). I wonder if anyone can discern the influence upon whatever piece they were writing at the time?
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Originally posted by visualnickmos View Post".....it is perhaps difficult to imagine that as a creative (musical in Bruckner's case) the witnessing of such an event would have no effect on any project that may be being worked on at such time."[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostJust out of interest, visnick, why do you find this "difficult to imagine"? As Roehre points out, there were several other composers working in Vienna at the time: is it "easier" to imagine them being more unaffected than you imagine Bruckner was, or do you hear the catastrophe having an effect on the works Brahms was writing at the time, too?
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostWas the third movement meant to represent the fire engines dashing to the scene?
I see it as horseman galloping. That may be from some distant childhood memory of a TV programme but I cannot remember what it was (but I do know that it was used in a Patrick Troughton sword fight in a very poor episode of Dr Who a few years later )Pacta sunt servanda !!!
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Originally posted by Flay View PostSo what does the Scherzo represent?
I see it as horseman galloping. That may be from some distant childhood memory of a TV programme but I cannot remember what it was (but I do know that it was used in a Patrick Troughton sword fight in a very poor episode of Dr Who a few years later )"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by Petrushka View PostI can't say why this happens but it does.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostWhat we know about Bruckner's 7th symphony is that it took three years to write, and that the "Wagner memorial" passage was begun while Wagner was still alive, in anticipation of his death which was of course hardly unexpected, given that he had been seriously ill since (IIRC) at least early 1882 with the heart complaint that would eventually kill him. And not even this is essential knowledge for someone seeking to understand the music in their and its own terms.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by edashtav View PostWhat we enthusiasts want to know is unknowable so we cleave to mere circumstantial evidence.
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Originally posted by Flay View PostSo what does the Scherzo represent?
I see it as horseman galloping. That may be from some distant childhood memory of a TV programme but I cannot remember what it was (but I do know that it was used in a Patrick Troughton sword fight in a very poor episode of Dr Who a few years later )Last edited by cloughie; 30-03-14, 13:39.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI hope you aren't suggesting that I'm not a Bruckner enthusiast, because actually I am! But what is this thing you want to know, and why do you want to know it? (I hope that doesn't sound like a cross-examination, I'm just curious really!)
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Richard Barrett
hmmm... seems there's not much appetite for continuing this discussion, which IMO is a shame. I hope nobody thinks I'm claiming more insight into Bruckner and his music than anyone else, I'm just trying to suggest a mode of listening which doesn't depend on received associations but on a more "personal" relationship with the music (and not with the presumed character of the composer!) which generates its own associations. Petrushka has mentioned this kind of thing, but others seem more concerned with the influence of biographical data...
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Posthmmm... seems there's not much appetite for continuing this discussion, which IMO is a shame. I hope nobody thinks I'm claiming more insight into Bruckner and his music than anyone else, I'm just trying to suggest a mode of listening which doesn't depend on received associations but on a more "personal" relationship with the music (and not with the presumed character of the composer!) which generates its own associations. Petrushka has mentioned this kind of thing, but others seem more concerned with the influence of biographical data...
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