Originally posted by ucanseetheend
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Prom 46 (16.8.12): Vaughan Williams – Symphonies Nos. 4, 5 & 6
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amateur51
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FoxyTheCat
Originally posted by Northender View PostIS Marin Alsop the 'rising star' to whom you are referring? People in the Bournemouth area might be amused at this description of their orchestra's former prinicpal conductor, who has also performed and recorded regularly with the LPO and the Baltimore Orchestra.
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Originally posted by Extra Vaganza View PostSea, Antarctic and 8.
Of the 9 symphonies, those are the 3 that I would not bother to listen to. Apparently I am not alone.
As regards Tippet, I would not mention his name in the same breath as RVW, but that is only my personal opinion.
I regard Bax as being neglected but would put Bliss as being a less important figure in British music.
My Brits list would be: Elgar, RVW, Walton. Bax and (just) Britten - in that order
Then again I'm the strange kind of bloke who would put Arnold in the Brits list, somewhere around the Walton level -- certainly above Bax and Britten. To hear his Symphony No. 7 live at the Proms would be an absolute delight!
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The comment about RVW having a fairly limited musical language, could be applied to many other composers; Elgar, Sibelius, Shostakovich, Mendelssohn for example. It is about how you work within these self-imposed limitations and how you successfully achieve variety inspite of this that matters and that is why composers such RVW, Shostakovich and Sibelius are great symphonists as they do just this.
I love all the RVW symphonies including no 8 (the 1st movement is structually fascinating). The other important British symphonists for me are: Elgar, Arnold, Simpson, Rubbra, Bax, Brian, Walton & Tippett. I also admire Alwyn, Stanford & Parry and the symphonies of Cipriani Potter shouldn't be overlooked either. I'm looking forward to listening to all but one of Hoddinott's symphonies and all of Daniel Jones's during my symphonic survey too to see how they compare. What is fascinating about British composers is the sheer variety of individual styles they evolve, each composer from Britten to Holst to RVW to Bax is clearly and instantly recogniseable.
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Roehre
Originally posted by mrbouffant View PostPerhaps it is just me who loves No. 8. Anyone else?
Then again I'm the strange kind of bloke who would put Arnold in the Brits list, somewhere around the Walton level -- certainly above Bax and Britten. To hear his Symphony No. 7 live at the Proms would be an absolute delight!
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Critics and specialists may comment on the technical failings of British composers, but I feel that what marks out Vaughan Williams, Elgar, Holst Walton and Britten is the memorability of their ideas, even when their styles are so different. On the other hand there are admirable composers like Rubbra, artists who had fine craftsmanship but rarely came up with ideas that attach
themselves to the listener.Perhaps the symphonies of Bax have some arresting oratory, but none of them have the imagination of his symphonic poems to my mind.
I'm probably out on a limb on this one, but I do think that trained musicians can recognise a certain worthiness of aim in composers like Rawsthorne, Berkeley and Alwyn that simply seems a grey uniformity to listeners like me. It is of course possible to be fascinated by difficulty, I'm a bit like that with Tippett, although I find him approachable in many ways
Life is short, and I have been listening and exploring for a long time, but I find myself returning to the undisputable best, of which there is plenty.
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heliocentric
What I find a bit odd here (and elsewhere) is the idea of taking a particular musical form - the symphony - which arguably in the 20th century loses a lot of the precision as a description that it had in previous times (as can be seen in another thread), and arranging composers in order of how good they were at doing it, whatever "it" is deemed to be by the person doing the ranking... I mean, one of the most important developments in twentieth-century compositional thinking was that the structure of a piece, at all levels, could be just as much a means of musical expression as anything else, that is to say (using a common analogy) that there was no longer any need for "old bottles" because every new wine could have a specially-shaped bottle of its own. Personally I wouldn't judge a piece on its qualities "as a symphony" as somehow separate from its other qualities, so whether a composer is a "symphonist" or not doesn't play much of a role.
"What is fascinating about British composers is the sheer variety of individual styles they evolve, each composer from Britten to Holst to RVW to Bax..." I guess that depends on your standpoint - they all wrote tonal music for mostly conventional 19th-century forces in mostly conventional 19th-century forms (symphonies, operas etc.), often with a tendency towards modality derived from British folk-music, and so on. Remember that RVW's Ninth Symphony was premiered a week after Stockhausen's Gruppen!!!
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Originally posted by Roehre View PostNo, you're not alone. I love 8. The one I dislike is the Sea Symphony.
However, the opening is absolutely splendid, which has caused me to revisit this from time to time. Possibly worth all of us persevering with this one. Also number 9 I find tough, and I find 3 bearable rather than enjoyable, but maybe I need to give it more time.
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Originally posted by Suffolkcoastal View PostI love all the RVW symphonies including no 8 (the 1st movement is structually fascinating). The other important British symphonists for me are: Elgar, Arnold, Simpson, Rubbra, Bax, Brian, Walton & Tippett. I also admire Alwyn, Stanford & Parry and the symphonies of Cipriani Potter shouldn't be overlooked either. I'm looking forward to listening to all but one of Hoddinott's symphonies and all of Daniel Jones's during my symphonic survey too to see how they compare. What is fascinating about British composers is the sheer variety of individual styles they evolve, each composer from Britten to Holst to RVW to Bax is clearly and instantly recogniseable.
Originally posted by mrbouffant View PostPerhaps it is just me who loves No. 8. Anyone else?
Then again I'm the strange kind of bloke who would put Arnold in the Brits list, somewhere around the Walton level -- certainly above Bax and Britten. To hear his Symphony No. 7 live at the Proms would be an absolute delight!
I must be strange too as I agree about Malcolm Arnold.
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I guess that depends on your standpoint - they all wrote tonal music for mostly conventional 19th-century forces in mostly conventional 19th-century forms (symphonies, operas etc.),
Personally I am not so interested in whether a composer is conventional or radical in his or her musical language but that the music has a recognisably individual style, that it is clearly and unmistakably the music of that composer. And that to my mind is certainly the case with Vaughan Williams. I thought it was an excellent Prom and I've been very impressed with Manze as a conductor (I prefer his work here to his work as a soloist, which is unusual).
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amateur51
Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostI only "discovered" Arnold when he died in 2006 and they showed that documentary about his life on TV. I immediately ordered the Naxos Symphony box which is most rewarding.
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