Originally posted by Richard Barrett
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Harrison Birtwistle 80
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post- mothers, eh?
On the other hand I really didn't see what all the fuss was about with Panic - it struck me as rather well-behaved and underwhelming in comparison with The Mask of Orpheus or Punch and Judy or even Antiphonies, to name three of my favourites. I haven't heard much of his most recent work but my general rule of thumb is that his larger-scale pieces are often powerful and memorable while the smaller-scale ones are often the opposite (though The Axe Manual is another favourite of mine).
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Originally posted by Sydney Grew View PostBut if the truth be told - which it must and will be in the end - it is not nearly as good as Mozart is it. And it is now a little late to go back to first principles.
Clearly, your post raises far more questions than it answers, though whether any of them are either answerable or merit being answered is perhaps another matter...Last edited by ahinton; 29-07-14, 11:48.
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Blotto
Originally posted by Sydney Grew View PostBut if the truth be told - which it must and will be in the end - it is not nearly as good as Mozart is it.
If you acknowledge that you aren't comparing like for like, can you identify someone whose music Birtwistle's is as good as, Sydney? Walton? Honegger? Maxwell Davies? John Field?
I heard his violin concerto at the Proms a few years ago with some pleasure but not when I've listened again and nothing else has ever touched me at all. Heard Gawain and Yan Tan Tethera at the Barbican this spring. YTT left me cold and Gawain was positively tiring. All those monosyllabic sung notes and a ponderous libretto. It was an hilariously 'unfortunate' semi-staging (though well-sung by Leigh Melrose and characterfully-acted by John Tomlinson) but the lumpen monotony of the music it was that failed. I suspect he won't be played any more often than Tippett after he dies. I wonder if Maxwell Davies will be played at all?
What must it be like to be a composer? For the most part, your music isn't especially enjoyed when you're alive and almost altogether forgotten by audiences soon after your death. I wonder what contribution does all the mediocre music make to life?Last edited by Guest; 29-07-14, 19:32.
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Time-frame on "durability" & value of recent & contemporary music just a touch shallow here, Blott? Tippett left us, what, 16 years ago...? I can recall at least one BBCSO cycle of the symphonies since, Proms performances too (Brabbins in No.2), but - what about recordings? As long as I'm able to listen I know I'll be pulling Tippett, Max or Harry B off the shelf... so even if there's no money or creative will to perform them (which I seriously doubt) the music will burn brightly in the ears, hearts and minds of living individuals, anyone who seeks to experience today's world afresh through new creation...
Not to mention the history of performance (and awareness, and understanding) of JS Bach, Mozart, Bruckner, Mahler...
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Originally posted by Blotto View PostIt doesn't seem to be, no. But then, whilst enjoyment of Mozart isn't universal, would there be too many people who'd suggest many composers' works are as good?
"Good" for what ?
The Chemical Brothers are "good" for dancing to
Feldman's music is "good" for freezing time
Music has many functions
the problem with apples is that they don't taste cheesy enough
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostThe Chemical Brothers are "good" for dancing to
Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostFeldman's music is "good" for freezing time
Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostMusic has many functions
Originally posted by MrGongGong View Postthe problem with apples is that they don't taste cheesy enough
None of the above undermines, or is meant to undermine, your point, by the way (in case you'd not already realised that!)...
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostTime-frame on "durability" & value of recent & contemporary music just a touch shallow here, Blott? Tippett left us, what, 16 years ago...? I can recall at least one BBCSO cycle of the symphonies since, Proms performances too (Brabbins in No.2), but - what about recordings? As long as I'm able to listen I know I'll be pulling Tippett, Max or Harry B off the shelf... so even if there's no money or creative will to perform them (which I seriously doubt) the music will burn brightly in the ears, hearts and minds of living individuals, anyone who seeks to experience today's world afresh through new creation...
Not to mention the history of performance (and awareness, and understanding) of JS Bach, Mozart, Bruckner, Mahler...
OK, we know that Tippett's work seemed to fall into quite a slough in the aftermath of his death - so did that of Joseph Marx - but the suggestion that composers are destined to get largely forgotten about as an inevitable consequence of their deaths hardly embarces universal truth, does it? Were Shostakovich or Britten sidelined from the mid-70s onwards because they'd departed this life? (or does premature death come with some kind of get out of jail card?)...
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Roehre
Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostTime-frame on "durability" & value of recent & contemporary music just a touch shallow here, Blott? Tippett left us, what, 16 years ago...? I can recall at least one BBCSO cycle of the symphonies since, Proms performances too (Brabbins in No.2), but - what about recordings? As long as I'm able to listen I know I'll be pulling Tippett, Max or Harry B off the shelf... so even if there's no money or creative will to perform them (which I seriously doubt) the music will burn brightly in the ears, hearts and minds of living individuals, anyone who seeks to experience today's world afresh through new creation...
Not to mention the history of performance (and awareness, and understanding) of JS Bach, Mozart, Bruckner, Mahler...
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostTime-frame on "durability" & value of recent & contemporary music just a touch shallow here, Blott? Tippett left us, what, 16 years ago...? I can recall at least one BBCSO cycle of the symphonies since, Proms performances too (Brabbins in No.2), but - what about recordings? As long as I'm able to listen I know I'll be pulling Tippett, Max or Harry B off the shelf... so even if there's no money or creative will to perform them (which I seriously doubt) the music will burn brightly in the ears, hearts and minds of living individuals, anyone who seeks to experience today's world afresh through new creation...
Not to mention the history of performance (and awareness, and understanding) of JS Bach, Mozart, Bruckner, Mahler...
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Blotto
Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostWhat on earth do you (or Sid) mean by "good" anyway ?
"Good" for what ?
The Chemical Brothers are "good" for dancing to
Feldman's music is "good" for freezing time
Music has many functions
the problem with apples is that they don't taste cheesy enough
Since I find it difficult to accept that I might be inadequate to the music's purpose, I would agree with the suggestion that the music is probably not as good as Mozart because it does not speaking with any meaning to me. It may as well be prattle or chatter or jabber.Last edited by Guest; 06-08-14, 18:40.
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