Originally posted by teamsaint
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Your wishes for 2016 (Music-related suggestions only please)
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... I think it would be wonderful to have a year without any Proms.
Those who find them tiresome would be happy.
Those who relish them would enjoy them all the more after a year's forced abstinence.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostI don't think that this would be an excuse that I'd ever have been able to make or indeed ever have made...I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostI wish Warner Classics would release Tippett's 'The Mask Of Time'.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostNo, it's not that - but what most people would call "an honest day's work" is not something that certain such people would likely think to associate with composing music!
( I never fail to marvel at the sheer volume of work in a large scale hand written score).......I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostOh, please, NO!! Assuming that BPO/SR would be prepared to perform any of this repertoire at all, just no. 7 would, I think, create a more positive impression of him as a symphonist to the uninitiated than would the whole lot!
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostGeorge Lloyds' time will come! He just needs a strong advocate. After all, there was a time when Mahler was looked down upon!
Yes, Mahler's time really began to come long after his death, although he always had his advocates - not only conductors like Walter but also critics such as Sorabji who never lost an opportunity to bang the drum for him.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostGeorge Lloyd's time has already come - and partially gone, I think. His work certainly got a lot of attention a few years ago and this was undoubtedly welcome, not least becuase he was one of the pioneering symphonists who revived the British symphonic tradition that had largely fallen on stony ground in the years leading to the early 1930s when he and Rubbra began writing symphonies. After Vaughan Williams's first three and Elgar's first two, Bax seems to have been the only British composer of note to carry the torch for symphonism in Britain until Brian and then Lloyd and Rubbra got going (although, of course, Brian's early symphonies - some of his best, I think - did not really impact of the consciousness of British concert goers in the days that he wrote them because they didn't receive public performances). I don't know why it is that Lloyd's Seventh Symphony seems to be on a considerably higher level than all of his others (and I've heard them all at one time or another apart from 2 and 10), but it deserves a great deal more attention that it's ever had and really ought to be a staple of British orchestras. That said, I'm just not convinced that he could reach the heights of his best work very often. Perhaps I'm wrong about that, but this is how it seems to me. The four piano concertos, each successive one of which grew out of the preceding one, just don;t add up to very much (and Lloyd was not a pianist anyway). He had more orchestral expertise than Brian occasionally displayed, but less substance, I fear.
Yes, Mahler's time really began to come long after his death, although he always had his advocates - not only conductors like Walter but also critics such as Sorabji who never lost an opportunity to bang the drum for him.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI've often wondered about why those great interwar and post-WW2 composers who were influenced by Mahler - Berg, Schoenberg and Webern (at times), Wellesz, Zemlinsky, Shostakovitch - never as far as I know gave Mahler the plug
Not to mention the Chamber Ensemble arrangements (such as that of Das Lied von de Erde) for the SPMP evenings.
AND the references to Mahler's Music in the Harmonielehre and the various articles collected in Style and Idea.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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How about some York Bowen? Any of the Piano concertos would be good. I also liked the suggestion of a whole week (or whatever) of works that had never been on at the Proms. Perhaps we could have the remaining Liszt symphonic poems as part of this? Kalliwoda is also a good suggestion, I recently discovered a few of his symphonic works and find them very interesting.
Joachim Raff???Best regards,
Jonathan
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