Originally posted by euthynicus
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RVW's annoyance that programmatic details were being taken for granted in his Fourth and Sixth Symphonies ("Why can't anyone believe that that someone might just wish to write a Symphony in E minor?!" - this from memory; I can't find the accurate quotation) would also suggest that he'd agree with you, as would Sibelius. But not Mahler, with his "The Symphony should be the world; it should contain everything!" And is it really not "permissible" to "hear" religious allegories in the harmonic/tonal shifts and turns in the Symphonies of Bruckner?
Perhaps it could be said that some people (composers, performers, listeners) prefer to hear extra-musical events going on when they hear a Symphony (and believe that these enhance the Music), whilst others get more excited by the Music in and of itself, and feel that such extra-musical considerations trivialize the Music. Personally, I prefer Berlioz' First Symphony in C major without the sub-Hammer Horror film "plot" he gave it along with the title Symphonie Fantastique. But it works, supremely well, with and/or without the "story".
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