Originally posted by JohnSkelton
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Prom 46 (16.8.12): Vaughan Williams – Symphonies Nos. 4, 5 & 6
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heliocentric
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Originally posted by heliocentric View PostYou seem to reckon that both too little and too much individualism are not good, so I was just wondering what is for you the right amount, etc.
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Are there particular social, institutional reasons for the conservatism of British music before the 1960s? In that there doesn't seem much influence by or attention to what mainland avant-garde (I know that's a shortcut) European composers were writing (I suppose Frank Bridge is an exception, but that some of his music is such an exception is striking).
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heliocentric
Originally posted by aeolium View PostWas it the case that the influence of the 2nd Viennese school did not really take effect until after the 2nd World War?
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JohnSkelton
Originally posted by heliocentric View PostIn an international context that's true to a great extent, although in the prewar period the influence of Stravinsky's neoclassicism, for example, could be found almost everywhere apart from the UK. With exceptions, naturally. Musical conservatism at that time, as I would use the term, isn't solely a matter of not writing "atonal" music. You wouldn't call Shostakovich's music or Hindemith's up to the mid-1930s conservative, or Debussy or Janáček or Bartók or Messiaen, or Strauss before Rosenkavalier, for example, even though none of these were followers of Schoenberg.
Returning to British music, the influence of Ravel seems to be there in Vaughan Williams (I know he studied with Ravel). Some of Bridge's music I've heard (the 4th quartet?) seems fascinated by a kind of Viennese expressionism.
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Northender
(Meanwhile, back among the simple folk... )
I've just watched the 5th and 6th, and thought both performances were tremendous, with a beautiful overall sound from the orchestra, who clearly shared Manze's view of these works and were happy to deliver it.
At times, the Epilogue of the 6th had me thinking of the Sibelius 4th. The sound (LG television/Freesat/Humax tuner thingy) chez nous was excellent. I also enjoyed the chat and features during the interval. The newly-bearded Petroc was something of a revelation. Simon Heffer's knowledge and enthusiasm came as no surprise following his recent spell on Saturday Classics. However, I'm not sure whether his statement that VW had shaken off Holst's influence can be squared with the fiercer moments of the 2nd movement of the 6th.
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VW is one of the composers I would take to my desert island, but I don't think much of this kind of programming. One VW symphony in each of three concerts would be much better, instead of cramming them altogether. It seems churlish to complain about such riches, but it's unimaginative, and somehaow reminiscent of the Mozart/Schubert-festes.
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Originally posted by JohnSkelton View Post
Returning to British music, the influence of Ravel seems to be there in Vaughan Williams (I know he studied with Ravel). Some of Bridge's music I've heard (the 4th quartet?) seems fascinated by a kind of Viennese expressionism.
Bridge's "turn" to Berg, especially, particularly in the Third String Quartet of 1926, strongly reminiscent of Berg's string quartet of 1910, is interesting. Unlike RVW and Holst there was no "sudden" reaction against Brahmsian/Wagnerian influences in early Bridge; from the pre-WW1 chamber works we see a grasp of adapted sonata form principles of the kind VW and Holst would have been glad to have being escaping from at that time. Vaughan Williams had effectively to build a new tonal language based on modalism (folk, Tudor and pre-Tudor music as much as Debussy/Ravel-based) to evolve the personal symphonic manner he did after ridding himself of Germanic influences (by way of Parry!) still evident in the Sea Symphony. Holst (interestingly, like his would-be pupil Britten) never managed to write a symphony or develop the kind of "British equivalent" to Sibelius which VW (and maybe Bax) succeeded in doing - although Holst did have a go at the end of his life, leaving the amazing Scherzo projected for a larger work. I think it would be unpresumptious to assume that Bridge remained faithful in mind to the Germanic tradition inherited from Brahms (and maybe he knew Reger's work), by way of Franck and Faure, and then tempered by the French impressionists. In Bridge';s case that gradually amassed blend lent a classists' solidity to his music that helped smoothe the way to the later, more radical language of the Piano Sonata, Third and Fourth String Quartets, lacking in lesser contemporaries such as John Ireland and Cyril Scott. As a follow on, Alan Bush, was an interesting might-have-been in this respect... but thats another part of an already overcomplicated story (by me!)
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Northender
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostVW is one of the composers I would take to my desert island, but I don't think much of this kind of programming. One VW symphony in each of three concerts would be much better, instead of cramming them altogether. It seems churlish to complain about such riches, but it's unimaginative, and somehaow reminiscent of the Mozart/Schubert-festes.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostVW is one of the composers I would take to my desert island, but I don't think much of this kind of programming. One VW symphony in each of three concerts would be much better, instead of cramming them altogether. It seems churlish to complain about such riches, but it's unimaginative, and somehaow reminiscent of the Mozart/Schubert-festes.
The proof of the pudding etc.
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Originally posted by JohnSkelton View PostYes, I meant unaffected by a broad range of developments, innovations in classical music - not specifically serialism. Interestingly I read something on the critical reception of Bartók in the USA prior to the Concerto for Orchestra and there are several contemporary comments seeing his music as more 'difficult' than Schoenberg's. How informed that was by how much knowledge of Schoenberg's music I don't know, though he certainly had a greater reputation than Bartók.
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