Let's see: better librettist; E M Forster or Michael Tippett?
Prom 45 - 16.08.13: Tippett – The Midsummer Marriage
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by Sir Velo View PostLet's see: better librettist; E M Forster or Michael Tippett?
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostBut that's the wrong question really, since opera is suppoed to be an artistic unity rather than two things stuck together. What I tried to address in my last post was that the style and structure of Tippett's texts reflect the style and structure of his music in a way probably nobody else could have managed. Personally I find this more interesting than the construction of a composer-librettist "dream team".
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Originally posted by Sir Velo View PostLet's see: better librettist; E M Forster or Michael Tippett?
If the reference to Forster was referring to his collaboration with Britten, he actually only wrote one libretto for Britten (the only libretto he wrote), & that was an adaptation of another author's work, so hardly a good comparison with Tippett.
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostIf the reference to Forster was referring to his collaboration with Britten, he actually only wrote one libretto for Britten (the only libretto he wrote), & that was an adaptation of another author's work, so hardly a good comparison with Tippett.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostObviously Michael Tippett was for the operas Michael Tippett wanted to write. If Forster had written the librettos they would have been different operas.
If the reference to Forster was referring to his collaboration with Britten, he actually only wrote one libretto for Britten (the only libretto he wrote), & that was an adaptation of another author's work, so hardly a good comparison with Tippett.
This is not to diminish Tippett's achievements, since they are many and impressive. I have less of a problem with the perceived gaucheries of his texts as I believe, along with RB, that they are integral to the works. Where I would disagree is that Britten was somehow perfunctory or uninspired in his text setting. Grimes; Budd; Turn of the Screw etc are all a successful fusion of words and music.
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Originally posted by Sir Velo View PostI cited Forster as an example of someone with whom Britten collaborated. Obviously, it was only the one opera, and there was another collaborator involved in the project.
However, my main point (which I admit I did not develop fully) was that Britten worked with librettists who, on the whole, provided a higher standard of literary output than Tippett did in his own works.
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Originally posted by Sir Velo View PostThis is not to diminish Tippett's achievements, since they are many and impressive. I have less of a problem with the perceived gaucheries of his texts as I believe, along with RB, that they are integral to the works.
Where I would disagree is that Britten was somehow perfunctory or uninspired in his text setting. Grimes; Budd; Turn of the Screw etc are all a successful fusion of words and music.
Much the same can be said of Tippett (and many other composers) - but I much prefer Tippett's engagement with developments in contemporary Theatre in his operas to Britten's more Rattiganesque idea of Drama.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post
Much the same can be said of Tippett (and many other composers) - but I much prefer Tippett's engagement with developments in contemporary Theatre in his operas to Britten's more Rattiganesque idea of Drama.
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amateur51
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostMuch the same can be said of Tippett (and many other composers) - but I much prefer Tippett's engagement with developments in contemporary Theatre in his operas to Britten's more Rattiganesque idea of Drama.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by amateur51 View Postit never occurred to me until now to make the connection between the theatrical break by Devine/Osborne and how it might have affected musical composition too.
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