Having received the complete Beethoven piano sonatas from Mr K. for Christmas and so far keeping to my resolution to play at least one movement of one sonata each day during this anniversary year (well, originally, it was to be a complete sonata every day, but heck . . . ) I find myself pondering angst in music. Beethoven, it seems to me, was a composer much given to expressing his angst in his compositions. One finds this emotion in numerous other European composers - Mahler, Wagner, Stravinsky, Tchaikovsky, Berlioz (I am flinging down names from the top of my head) - but it strikes me that angst is quite remarkably absent from most British composers (setting aside, perhaps, Britten and Tippet). There is, of course, deep melancholy in such as Elgar and Vaughan Williams, but when RVW tried for angst, in his 4th symphony, he merely appears as very cross.
Am I mistaken?
Am I mistaken?
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