Maybe the next time they play the Beethoven 9th at the Proms, the first half could feature Tchaikovsky's 30-minute Graduation Cantata "Ode to Joy." It's scored for the same vocal, choral and orchestral forces as the Beethoven, though the Schiller text is in Russian, naturally enough. Even though it was a student composition, it has many melodic pre-echoes of later works from "Swan Lake" to "Eugene Onegin." The Thomas Sanderling recording on You Tube is particularly impressive, so Tchaikovsky's setting would make a good first-half novelty prior to the Beethoven in what would be its Proms debut ...
Works missing from the Proms for too long
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wenotsoira
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wenotsoira
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostANY symphony by George Lloyd! If only my Euromillions ticket would hit the jackpot then I could sponsor a complete cycle by Sir Simon and Die Berliner Philharmoniker! (However, I'm aware time is running out...!)
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Originally posted by seabright View PostMaybe the next time they play the Beethoven 9th at the Proms, the first half could feature Tchaikovsky's 30-minute Graduation Cantata "Ode to Joy."
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Originally posted by Colonel Danby View PostHow about a complete cycle of the symphonic music of William Havegal Brian at the Proms? I know that they did the 'Gothic' a few years ago, which was joyful, but this stuff ought to be heard.
Only joking...
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostANY symphony by George Lloyd! If only my Euromillions ticket would hit the jackpot then I could sponsor a complete cycle by Sir Simon and Die Berliner Philharmoniker! (However, I'm aware time is running out...!)Originally posted by ahinton View PostNah. Just the Seventh will do, although why it seems to me to be way above anything else of his that I've heard I do not know.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostIndeed - but a handful of these works really do deserve to be heard there - no question - so let the powers that be not try not to get too hung up on the fact of there being 32 of them...
Brian was lucky to have had a champion in Robert Simpson, who saw to it that the BBC paid for quite a few studio performances, but since he departed the globe I doubt if anyone else has worked up the same kind of enthusiasm. But then, there are those in the Robert Simpson Society who claim that his symphonies are "masterpieces" but how often does anyone hear them these days?
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Roehre
Originally posted by maestro267 View PostHow often a work is played has absolutely nothing to do with whether or not it's a "masterpiece". The idea that 'If a work is not played much, there's a good reason for it' is the biggest load of nonsense I've ever heard. Let each of us hear it and form our own opinions.
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Originally posted by Roehre View Post
(Though I have to say, hearing the Tchaikovsky Ode to Joy, and reading the suggestions for Lloyd and Brian [the wrong one] makes me all the more keen to hear the Beethoven, Brahms and Mahler symphonies again! )[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by seabright View PostLewis Foreman's book on Havergal Brian quotes a 'Music & Musicians' review of the 32nd Symphony by Geoffrey Crankshaw in which he dismissed the first performance of the 32nd Symphony as "an event of singular drabness. From the first bar to the last there was not one arresting idea ... Brian has produced in this symphony a collection of notes scored with the ability I would expect of a third-year student. I can see no case of wicked neglect: in my view he is an utterly mediocre composer."
Brian was lucky to have had a champion in Robert Simpson, who saw to it that the BBC paid for quite a few studio performances, but since he departed the globe I doubt if anyone else has worked up the same kind of enthusiasm. But then, there are those in the Robert Simpson Society who claim that his symphonies are "masterpieces" but how often does anyone hear them these days?
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