Originally posted by aeolium
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You're right, aeolium,that some works which receive a warm welcome have real value. They tend to be written in a conservative idiom ( e.g. Britten - Peter Grimes and War Requiem), but those very works often cause a later critical reaction: for all Britten's mastery, does his dated idiom mean that his eventual rating will be less than his current one? I, for one, fear so.
I shall not resile from my position that Telemann is fine for "light listening" but contains too little to engage the critical mind.
But... I don't accept that great music is designed to cool the mind of a tired hard-worker.
You can approach a work of art in a gallery in 1001 ways and levels. Great music is best heard in a concert hall. You're stuck in a seat, encouraged to pipe down. If you don't concentrate on it ... what else can you do?
The days when serious music was a background to living or being "seen" departed with the baroque.
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