Originally posted by waldhorn
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Neglected works by popular composers
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Dvorak's concert overtures In Nature's Realm and Othello: very fine works, but probably not played as often as their companion piece, Carnival.
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Since the Bridgewater Hall, Manchester, opened, there have been 2 Sibelius symphony cycles and another one scheduled for next year. Yet the 'Kullervo' symphony was/is not included in them:. A very sad omission.
When do you hear any music by Suk, apart for the 'Asrael' symphony, played these days?
Dvorak's early symphonies are also too seldom heard.
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Northender
I think Dvorak's 5th is a wonderful work.
Walton's 2nd symphony doesn't seem to be programmed very often, does it? Not in the same league as the 1st, but surely worth an occasional outing...
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Dvorak's early symphonies are also too seldom heard.
I have no real idea why this work is neglected, except the standard one of the concert scheduler's fear of programming anything unexpected so that if it is Schubert, it must be 5, 8 or 9; if it is Dvorak, it must be 7, 8 or 9; if it is Tchaikovsky, it must be 4, 5 or 6 etc etc
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Originally posted by Northender View PostI think Dvorak's 5th is a wonderful work.
Walton's 2nd symphony doesn't seem to be programmed very often, does it? Not in the same league as the 1st, but surely worth an occasional outing...
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostTrue to some extent what you say, Northy, but the second does have a wonderfully passionate slow central movement, as good as anything he composed, imho.
The Passacaglia last movement is on the same level of inventive intensity as the slow movement, and its difficult, high-lying horn solo always send a shiver up the spine ( especially when one has to play it!)
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Originally posted by waldhorn View PostI think it's the flimsy, insubstantial 1st movement that lets it down.
The Passacaglia last movement is on the same level of inventive intensity as the slow movement, and its difficult, high-lying horn solo always send a shiver up the spine ( especially when one has to play it!)
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Originally posted by waldhorn View PostI think it's the flimsy, insubstantial 1st movement that lets it down.
The Passacaglia last movement is on the same level of inventive intensity as the slow movement, and its difficult, high-lying horn solo always send a shiver up the spine ( especially when one has to play it!)
I adore the first two movements of the Walton #2; that glowing, radiant first movement where the composer explores exciting new harmonic possibilities for the first time in twenty years. And then (as S_A so rightly says) the "wonderfully passionate" second movement: marvellous stuff ...
... and then, he just gives up: a dull (IMO) twelve-note theme followed by some perfunctory (IMO) variations that even the composer got bored (IMO) with so brought to an abrupt stop.
So nearly as good as the First.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by salymap View PostWaldhorn - I have a CD of the Walton 2, Bournemouth SO, conducted by Charles Groves from a BBC lunchtime concert, no date. Would you have inside knowledge of this, may I ask? It's never appealed to me as much as no 1, which is such a wonderful work. I must listen to it again soon.
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