Originally posted by ahinton
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Music you've known about but never heard until recently
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Originally posted by Panjandrum View Postwould you say, therefore, that "Firebird" or "Le Sacre" were immature Stravinsky? Surely not, yet they are very different from the quasi serial works of his latter years. Why say then that Szymanowski or Schoenberg in their later works showed them more "audibly themselves"? I agree that Szymanowski or Schoenberg (or Webern for that matter) changed styles, but this does not mean their early works weren't representative of themselves, at that particular point of their career.Last edited by ahinton; 14-06-12, 08:08.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostStravinsky's "metamorphoses" of style, while retaining the virtue of always sounding like Stravinsky, have always struck me as cynical and magpie-like advantage-taking rather than the result of natural and inevitable maturing per se.
They've always struck me as admirable artistic reactions to what was going on around him - a conscious desire to keep his Music fresh and avoid the pitfalls of resting on his laurels. Whatever his mode of writing, he continued to write works that are amongst the miracles of human imagination. The structures of his works rarely conform to Teutonic ideas of "organic" development, so why should we expect his stylistic course to show such "smooth" lines of development? This is "natural and inevitable maturing" in his own terms: to impose more usual standards on him is like Schenker "proving" the invalidity of his Music by demonstrating that his Piano Concerto didn't conform to Schenkerian ideals.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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I too was knocked out by Roussel's 3rd Symphony when I first heard it, though I was about 21 I think. I've since found Roussel to one of the most interesting and satisfying French composers. I am also most interested in the influence he had on two of my favourite American composers, Walter Piston & David Diamond.
I hope your exploration of Honegger's music is enjoyable am51, he's another composer I've grown to admire over the last 20 years, but sadly one that has become largely sidelined by the current R3 regime.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostNo indeed it doesn't but, for all Jayne's difficulties with Schönberg's Pelleas (which I do not at all share and in response to which I can only recommend persistence that will ultimately pay rich dividends!), I interpret what she writes on this as meaning that some composers achieve a level of maturity and recognisable individuality at an earlier ae and/or at an earlier stage in their careers than do others, three cases of which that occur to me off the cuff being Chopin, Brahms and Medtner, each of whom seemed to arrive on the scene almost "fully formed", as it were, although their styles continued to mature even though they admittedly underwent rather less drastic changes than those of Schönberg or Stravinsky; that said, let's not forget Schönberg's observations about not having changed his style at all but continuing to write as once he did except that people hadn't noticed! (and Stravinsky's "metamorphoses" of style, while retaining the virtue of always sounding like Stravinsky, have always struck me as cynical and magpie-like advantage-taking rather than the result of natural and inevitable maturing per se).
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amateur51
Originally posted by Suffolkcoastal View PostI too was knocked out by Roussel's 3rd Symphony when I first heard it, though I was about 21 I think. I've since found Roussel to one of the most interesting and satisfying French composers. I am also most interested in the influence he had on two of my favourite American composers, Walter Piston & David Diamond.
I hope your exploration of Honegger's music is enjoyable am51, he's another composer I've grown to admire over the last 20 years, but sadly one that has become largely sidelined by the current R3 regime.
Still, I count myself as being very fortunate to have the experience and knowledge of the fascinating members of this board to tap into for highways & by-ways and then being able to toddle over to Spotify/youtube for tasters before committing myself to a purchase
'Tis a Golden Age, I tells ya!
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Roehre
Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostAnd Oedipus Rex 1925-27, & the Symphony of Psalms 1930 - both great works.
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Originally posted by Roehre View PostThough there is a couple of works from the early 'forties (Scènes de Ballet, e.g.) which might be considered to be less inspired
(* = First performed 52 years ago today, IIRC?**)
EDIT: ** = Don't know where I got that idea from: 10th January, 1960.)[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Roehre
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostIncluding the Movements*, which is one of my favourites: the way he "riffs" with the possibilities he found in Serialism is a source of endless delight.
(* = First performed 52 years ago today, IIRC?)
Re Movements' being ruled by the technique: the treatment of the series in the 4th part of Agon, and -though obviously austere- Threni, or in A Serman, a Narrative and a Prayer, let alone The Flood shows a much more "free-floating" (I don't know another word how to describe this), perhaps even more inspired Stravinsky at work.
I love all these works, but IMO Movements is too "seriously serial" .
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Agon and Threni: wonderful works both (the former possibly my favourite work of all IS's output. Apart from whichever one I'm listening to!) and showing a composer who had no qualms about any alleged "superiority" of his earlier masterpieces.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Massenet's 'Werther'...
I've been listening to the France Musique podcast of their 2 hour comparison programme of recordings of the piece.
It's so way outside my usual tastes - apart from the Frenchness, the orchestration... In the extracts chosen for comparison, I was struck by the beauty of the orchestral writing, the lack of .. triteness (I had assumed Massenet would be banal and pretty). Come to think of it, 'Pelléas' is one of the few operas I love, and the orchestral and vocal writing seems a not-too-distant precursor.
Not what I was expecting at all."...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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