Home » Discussion Forums » Blog Post Discussion » Messiaen, Bartok and Britten
| Messiaen, Bartok and Britten [message #7080] |
Fri, 05 December 2008 20:38  |
Ithilien Messages: 701 Registered: September 2008 |
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Blog entry here
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| Re: Messiaen, Bartok and Britten [message #7086 is a reply to message #7080 ] |
Fri, 05 December 2008 21:19   |
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| Quote: | Click on ‘Daniel plays Messiaen’ on the right, and . . . sit back. You may want to hang onto your chair.
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No kidding! That's some intense music. Pretty awesome, though. Thanks!
Smooshes!
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| Re: Messiaen, Bartok and Britten [message #7092 is a reply to message #7080 ] |
Fri, 05 December 2008 21:58   |
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Susan from Athens Messages: 817 Registered: October 2008 Location: Athens, Greece |
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Well I haven't heard Four Organs, but I like quite a bit of Steve Reich, especially in live performance, because his pieces have a really choreographic quality. I love Different Trains, and how simple things add up to this massive confluence of emotion and turbulence, I enjoy Triple Quartet and Music for 18 Musicians. And most particularly clapping music, which is all, well clapping.
Bartok, yes please, Messiaen, not yet. And no Kancheli, either. I did hear a rather lovely atonal piece by Boulez played by some of the Mahler Chamber Orchestra last month. I found it fascinating, but not music I would listen to at home. I do find it fascinating and stimulating in the concert hall however.
It's funny how you write music in a medium or soundscape that you wouldn't have chosen if anyone had waved a magic wand and said choose. I'm bilingual from birth, and read almost exclusively English language books and poetry (with odd bits of French here and there), but when I write poetry - mostly nonsense verse and none of it any good, I write in Greek. You wonder what comes wandering out of your subconscious, don't you?
“I have always imagined heaven to be a kind of library.” –Jorge Luis Borges
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| Re: Messiaen, Bartok and Britten [message #7101 is a reply to message #7080 ] |
Sat, 06 December 2008 00:15   |
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blondviolinist Messages: 1067 Registered: October 2008 Location: Midwestern United States |
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As soon as I saw the title of this blog post, I squealed in glee. I love these composers! (Britten, unfortunately, I am not as familiar with as I would like, but I have played several of his pieces before, including the Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings.)
My first experience with Messiaen was the Quator pour la fin du Temps. It was an incredible faculty performance in a room completely darkened except for the musicians' stand lights. I felt like I'd stepped into an entirely different universe. He really does manage to create a seemingly timeless space within that piece. (It doesn't hurt that the closing movement is an incredibly gorgeous violin solo.)
And Bartok... Bartok is one of the composers I could never, ever, live without. (He's also one of the composers that I probably would not have understood at all when I was in high school. Fortunately for me, I wasn't introduced to his music until my ears were ready to listen.) I had the opportunity to take an incredible theory class on Bartok with one of the rising stars of Bartok scholarship. Wow! A whole semester on his music, and I came out of it more in love with his music than ever. What's more, I halfway understood what he was doing compositionally, which considering how complicated and brilliant he is, is saying something. (My browser's spellchecker doesn't like the word "compositionally." It obviously needs to hang out with more musicians.)
Ok, must stop before I spiral off into the heaven of twentieth-century music.
P.S. I don't particularly care for Schoenberg, either, but Hindemith I love. His viola works...
OK, I really must stop.
[Updated on: Sat, 06 December 2008 00:16] "Purity of heart is to will one thing." Kirkegaard
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| Re: Messiaen, Bartok and Britten [message #7106 is a reply to message #7080 ] |
Sat, 06 December 2008 02:08   |
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Diane in MN Messages: 2729 Registered: October 2008 Location: Twin Cities, MN, USA |
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Line blondviolinist, the first Messiaen I heard was the Quatuor pour la fin du temps, and I liked it very much. I like Vingt regards sur l'enfant-Jesus also. After reading an essay on Messiaen's opera Saint Francois d'Assise, I tracked down a recording; I wanted to listen to it in peace and quiet in the car, but I found that I need the libretto. (I also need something like five undisturbed hours--this is why a car trip seemed like the perfect venue--so this is a so-far uncompleted project.) The public radio program Pipedreams (organ music) had an all-Messiaen show a couple of weeks ago in honor of his centenary--the link to the web page is
http://pipedreams.publicradio.org
Have you come across or read Alex Ross's book The Rest Is Noise? Ross is classical music critic for The New Yorker and this book is a history of 20th century music. It recently came out in paper and is on my to-be-read pile right now. I'm feeling about ready for a spell of non-fiction.
In the meantime, the Met is broadcasting Tristan tomorrow afternoon, and if it doesn't snow I'll be listening in the van while taking Teddy to St. Cloud to meet our handlers. Listening with *no interruptions*. Car trips do have plusses. 
"The point of books is to have way too many but to always feel you never have enough . . . " Louise Erdrich
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| Re: Messiaen, Bartok and Britten [message #7111 is a reply to message #7080 ] |
Sat, 06 December 2008 05:44   |
kmallon2002 Messages: 2 Registered: October 2008 Location: United States - Delaware |
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I was recently given a piano and am working my way back into playing something resembling music. I like the following websites for sheet music:
http://imslp.org/wiki/Main_Page
http://choralwiki.net/wiki/index.php/Main_Page
(I like the choralwiki page mostly because my primary music outlet at this point is vocal...and I found Monteverdi's "Beatus Vir" on this website...which I am determined to perform some day before I die!)
Those two websites are for public domain pieces.
I also like 8notes.com: they have a good variety of sheet music for a lot of different instruments, many of which you can download for free...although I have found that some of the pieces are not transcribed correctly....but you get what you pay for, right?
I am still looking for a copy of Anton Rubinstein's "The Advent",though.
I know whtat you mean about the music suddenly making sense: my husband is a jazz freak and I am not. I remember going with him to see Bill Frisell and Wayne Horwitz, and it was like spending an evening at a dinner party where nobody spoke English, and then there was one song that ended with a straight-ahead rock and roll riff and I "got it". I call that my "light bulb going on" moment. After that, I started to catch a word or two of what was going on in the musical conversation. I'm still learning the vocabulary and grammar, but I can almost get around on my own now.
God laughs at those who make plans.
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| Re: Messiaen, Bartok and Britten [message #7125 is a reply to message #7111 ] |
Sat, 06 December 2008 11:37   |
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Oh this brings back memories.
My piano teacher informed me one year that, to compete in the competitions the following spring, I would have to learn a modern piece. I almost _died_. I was a Bach fan through and through and found modern music to be a mockery of Bach's clean work.
I learned Bartok's Bagatelle No.2. I hated every phrase of it and my teacher let me change to 'Blue' and "Orange" from Robert Starer's "Sketches in Color". I can't remember if I placed in the competition but I do remember my hate of Bartok.
I've mellowed in over the years and have come to appreciate modern music. With all this talk about Britten, I think I'm going to have to check him out. My obsession at the moment is Irish Folk so the jump to Britten shouldn't be too hard. (I think)
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| Re: Messiaen, Bartok and Britten [message #7129 is a reply to message #7080 ] |
Sat, 06 December 2008 12:38   |
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I know you love classical music and opera, Robin, but what about good solid REAL rock?
[Updated on: Sat, 06 December 2008 12:39] "And by the way you look fantastic in your boots of Chinese plastic."
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| Re: Messiaen, Bartok and Britten [message #7165 is a reply to message #7080 ] |
Sat, 06 December 2008 20:56   |
judith Messages: 246 Registered: October 2008 Location: United States |
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| Quote: | I don’t do twelve-tone, I don’t do atonal, I don’t do Hindemith or Schoenberg and I seriously don’t do Webern.
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Hmmm. I don't know that it's QUITE fair to put Hindemith in the same category with "twelve-tone" and "atonal" and Schoenberg and Webern. Hindemith I can hum. Once I get the ballet "The Four Temperaments" in my head, it's stuck there (as it is now, thanks to you bringing him up -- sigh). The other two -- noise as far as I'm concerned. I had to learn stuff by them for college choir. It certainly challenges you as a musician, especially when your director mixes people up and you don't even stand next to people singing your part. But I pity the poor parents having to listen to it. Cats fighting is more interesting.
| Quote: | But Messiaen . . . don’t make me laugh. No way I’m going to engage with him.
. . .
I went in today planning to ask Oisin–who is also a sheet music source, I think I’ve told you–if he could find sheet music for the Woodlark from Messiaen’s catalogue d’oiseaux and Vingt regards sur l’enfant-Jesus.
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The one piece by Messiaen that I've really liked was the first one I heard -- on the radio, which was "Vingt regards sur l’enfant-Jesus". I've never managed to get a recording. Considering that I first heard it on the radio as an undergraduate, there must be one out there somewhere by now. His other stuff would probably grow on me if I gave it a chance. I do like the other 20th century French guys quite a lot. Durufle, Widor, etc. I'm particularly fond of the Widor Sixth Organ Symphony. If you want your socks blown off, give it a try.
| Quote: | And in case you’d like to try a little thrilling Messiaen organ music for yourself, http://www.danielmoult.com/index.php Click on ‘Daniel plays Messiaen’ on the right, and . . . sit back. You may want to hang onto your chair.
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Yup. Right up my alley! I DO like having my socks blown off.
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| Re: Messiaen, Bartok and Britten [message #7173 is a reply to message #7080 ] |
Sat, 06 December 2008 23:29   |
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Now I know why Shelley likes hanging out in the fibercrafting thread - I'm not a musician and most of the stuff goes over my head, but it sure does sound pretty when you talk about it...
"The center of every man's existence is a dream. Death, disease, insanity, are merely material accidents, like a toothache or a twisted ankle. That these brutal forces always besiege and often capture the citadel does not prove that they are the citadel."
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| Re: Messiaen, Bartok and Britten [message #7176 is a reply to message #7080 ] |
Sat, 06 December 2008 23:51   |
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Black Bear Messages: 3216 Registered: September 2008 Location: Indianapolis, IN USA |
Senior Member [Moderator] |
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And incidentally, anyone who's interested--check out the Pandora Radio website. It lets you tap into a thing called the Music Genome Project; they've got an audio library of thousands of artists, tagged with various attributes, and if you sign up for an account (free!) you can "create" a online radio station based on something you know you like. Pandora will then stream for you music that's been tagged with those same attributes--so if I create the "Jethro Tull Station" for myself, Pandora plays in my browser a mix of Tull, Zeppelin, Steeleye Span, Floyd, Yes, etc.... Very interesting, very cool, and a neat way of hearing more artists that I might not have encountered before, but I'm inclined to like. It's not perfect (my "Gregorian Chant" station has been playing me a lot of acoustic folky stuff that is not what I'm looking for when I'm in a Gregorian mood) but it's pretty good. I've been using it a lot at work, just keep one of my browser windows open with it and I've got music to work by all day.
"The time is always right to do what's right."--MLK Jr.
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| Re: Messiaen, Bartok and Britten [message #7180 is a reply to message #7165 ] |
Sun, 07 December 2008 00:37   |
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Diane in MN Messages: 2729 Registered: October 2008 Location: Twin Cities, MN, USA |
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| judith wrote on Sat, 06 December 2008 19:56 |
The one piece by Messiaen that I've really liked was the first one I heard -- on the radio, which was "Vingt regards sur l’enfant-Jesus". I've never managed to get a recording. Considering that I first heard it on the radio as an undergraduate, there must be one out there somewhere by now. His other stuff would probably grow on me if I gave it a chance. I do like the other 20th century French guys quite a lot. Durufle, Widor, etc. I'm particularly fond of the Widor Sixth Organ Symphony. If you want your socks blown off, give it a try.
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My recording of Vingt regards is by Joanna MacGregor and put out by Collins Classics, a British label; the copyright is 1996 by Lambourne Productions Ltd. I've never seen another recording, but the classical sections of what passes for record/CD stores these days don't run to much Messiaen, and since I don't need another copy I've never checked out the web.
The only Durufle I know is the requiem, which I love. And of course I also love the Widor toccata but that seems to be the only piece of his that gets air time--and I don't remember which symphony it's from. Now that we are in the TWENTY-FIRST century, you'd think the 20th-century guys would get played more, but so far that hasn't happened.
"The point of books is to have way too many but to always feel you never have enough . . . " Louise Erdrich
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| Re: Messiaen, Bartok and Britten [message #7182 is a reply to message #7151 ] |
Sun, 07 December 2008 00:54   |
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Diane in MN Messages: 2729 Registered: October 2008 Location: Twin Cities, MN, USA |
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| Robin wrote on Sat, 06 December 2008 17:02 | Radio Three played St Francis not too long ago and as a result I have it on my list (although nothing much *happens* in a funny way. I've listened to too much Verdi and Mozart. I'm not to be trusted about this either however--I have a similar reaction to Tristan. You have love, death, betrayal, murder, etc--certainly enough going on--but listening to it it still sounds like several people standing around moaning. I seem to be having a slight retrogression on my increased understanding of Wagner.) I haven't even checked to see if there's more than one recording--please let us know if yours is a good one.
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The quick skim of notes and libretto I did when I regretfully unloaded Saint-francois from the car CD player seemed to suggest that the piece is more like a series of tableaux than continuous action, each one preceded by either a fast or a slow musical introduction. The recording I have is by Nagano and I *think* the Paris opera. I suspect that there has not been a rush to make more recordings. I will report back.
Don't you think that in Tristan the action is secondary to the characters' reflections about it?
"The point of books is to have way too many but to always feel you never have enough . . . " Louise Erdrich
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| Re: Messiaen, Bartok and Britten [message #7192 is a reply to message #7156 ] |
Sun, 07 December 2008 04:57   |
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Does anyone use this book? Amazon Germany won't let me look inside it. Currently I play the Celtic harp more than the piano, problem being that accidentals are difficult on a non-pedal harp. If someone has this book would it be possible to throw a glance inside and see if there are major key changes? Occasional sharps and flats aren't a problem. (Yes I could order it and see ... however then I would keep it and, as I don't like playing on my keyboard, I won't use it.)
I looked for Britten in my normal on-line harp music shop. It was a quick search. Anytime I spend more than 5 minutes there I end up with a full shopping basket and an empty bank account.
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| Re: Messiaen, Bartok and Britten [message #7193 is a reply to message #7186 ] |
Sun, 07 December 2008 04:59   |
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| cgbookcat1 wrote on Sun, 07 December 2008 07:31 | kmallon2002 said: | Quote: | and I found Monteverdi's "Beatus Vir" on this website...which I am determined to perform some day before I die!
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Do you need a 1st or 2nd soprano? I'll volunteer! I can convince my boyfriend to take on the tenor part if need be.
I have an aversion to organ music and haven't heard much Messiaen, but I love Bartok.
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Let me know when the performance will be!
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| Re: Messiaen, Bartok and Britten [message #7229 is a reply to message #7080 ] |
Sun, 07 December 2008 13:58   |
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Robin, I guess I emphasized real the way I did so you wouldn't think I was talking about bubblegum heavy metal, pop-rock, etc. Led Zep--oh yes, yes. Metallica. I like Pink Floyd too, but not all their stuff. I like rock with real guts--oh, Robin Trower is wonderful, and I saw them live, and I got the vapors when they did "Bridge of Sighs." Music needs to be a little raw to grab me. Does that make sense?
"And by the way you look fantastic in your boots of Chinese plastic."
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| Re: Messiaen, Bartok and Britten [message #7258 is a reply to message #7176 ] |
Sun, 07 December 2008 19:36   |
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Robin Messages: 6000 Registered: September 2008 Location: England |
Senior Member [Hellgoddess] |
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| Black Bear wrote on Sat, 06 December 2008 23:51 | And incidentally, anyone who's interested--check out the Pandora Radio website. It lets you tap into a thing called the Music Genome Project; they've got an audio library of thousands of artists, tagged with various attributes, and if you sign up for an account (free!) you can "create" a online radio station based on something you know you like. Pandora will then stream for you music that's been tagged with those same attributes--so if I create the "Jethro Tull Station" for myself, Pandora plays in my browser a mix of Tull, Zeppelin, Steeleye Span, Floyd, Yes, etc.... Very interesting, very cool, and a neat way of hearing more artists that I might not have encountered before, but I'm inclined to like. It's not perfect (my "Gregorian Chant" station has been playing me a lot of acoustic folky stuff that is not what I'm looking for when I'm in a Gregorian mood) but it's pretty good. I've been using it a lot at work, just keep one of my browser windows open with it and I've got music to work by all day.
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Yes. Except it doesn't work in England. Grrrrr.
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| Re: Messiaen, Bartok and Britten [message #7260 is a reply to message #7182 ] |
Sun, 07 December 2008 19:44   |
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Robin Messages: 6000 Registered: September 2008 Location: England |
Senior Member [Hellgoddess] |
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| Diane in MN wrote on Sun, 07 December 2008 00:54 |
| Robin wrote on Sat, 06 December 2008 17:02 | Radio Three played St Francis not too long ago and as a result I have it on my list (although nothing much *happens* in a funny way. I've listened to too much Verdi and Mozart. I'm not to be trusted about this either however--I have a similar reaction to Tristan. You have love, death, betrayal, murder, etc--certainly enough going on--but listening to it it still sounds like several people standing around moaning. I seem to be having a slight retrogression on my increased understanding of Wagner.) I haven't even checked to see if there's more than one recording--please let us know if yours is a good one.
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The quick skim of notes and libretto I did when I regretfully unloaded Saint-francois from the car CD player seemed to suggest that the piece is more like a series of tableaux than continuous action, each one preceded by either a fast or a slow musical introduction. The recording I have is by Nagano and I *think* the Paris opera. I suspect that there has not been a rush to make more recordings. I will report back.
Don't you think that in Tristan the action is secondary to the characters' reflections about it?
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Series of tableaux--yes, I think you're right. I think I feel a faint stir of memory that Radio Three said something similar. Yes, absolutely, about Tristan, which is I think what I'm having trouble with. I have an upper limit to people standing around clutching themselves and agonising. Doooooo get on with it. You know, make a decision! ANY decision, just MAKE one! Although Isolde's self-willed demise is pretty impressive.
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| Re: Messiaen, Bartok and Britten [message #7261 is a reply to message #7258 ] |
Sun, 07 December 2008 20:06   |
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Black Bear Messages: 3216 Registered: September 2008 Location: Indianapolis, IN USA |
Senior Member [Moderator] |
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| Robin wrote on Sun, 07 December 2008 19:36 |
Yes. Except it doesn't work in England. Grrrrr.
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Oh bugger, seriously??
Argh, now I see it in the FAQ--licensing issues. They do say they're working on international permissions, but--drat. Well, you can use my ZIP code to register, if you like... but it may yet not work if you're on a UK internet provider.
| Quote: | And I'm not a big fan of gloomy for the sake of being gloomy.
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Yes, I have a rule I can't listen to Floyd when I'm depressed, it encourages the downward spiral. 
| Quote: | I do have a considerable weakness for Jethro Tull however. 
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We'll have to compare favorite tracks sometime. I woke up this morning with part of "Thick as a Brick" stuck in my head, don't know what was up with that...
"The time is always right to do what's right."--MLK Jr.
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| Re: Messiaen, Bartok and Britten [message #7301 is a reply to message #7173 ] |
Mon, 08 December 2008 13:52   |
judith Messages: 246 Registered: October 2008 Location: United States |
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| Diane in MN wrote on Sun, 07 December 2008 00:37 | My recording of Vingt regards is by Joanna MacGregor and put out by Collins Classics, a British label; the copyright is 1996 by Lambourne Productions Ltd. I've never seen another recording, but the classical sections of what passes for record/CD stores these days don't run to much Messiaen, and since I don't need another copy I've never checked out the web.
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Thanks, ladies! You inspired me to listen to excerpts and go out and find a copy. Amazon had some fine recordings and I picked one out and ordered it. (And all, of course, done since the stone age when I was an undergrad.) I do love internet shopping. More precisely, I hate shopping in person.
| Diane in MN wrote on Sun, 07 December 2008 00:37 | The only Durufle I know is the requiem, which I love. And of course I also love the Widor toccata but that seems to be the only piece of his that gets air time--and I don't remember which symphony it's from. Now that we are in the TWENTY-FIRST century, you'd think the 20th-century guys would get played more, but so far that hasn't happened.
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The Requiem is magnificent. The ending makes my hair stand on end, no matter how many times I sing it or hear it.
The Widor toccata is, I believe, from his Fifth Organ Symphony -- the last movement. That one's pretty good too, but I do love the Sixth.
Another HUGE favorite of mine is Charles Tournemire's "Improvisations sur la Te Deum". It used to open a radio program I listened to in college, and I couldn't for the life of me figure out what it was, because no one ever said what it was. And once it was played on the radio, and I couldn't make out the name of the composer or the name of the work. After many, many years, I FINALLY caught it on the radio and managed to find a copy of a CD while visiting the bookstore at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in NYC. LOVE that piece! I can't find an excerpt to post, but if anyone else can, it's well worth your while.
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| Re: Messiaen, Bartok and Britten [message #7366 is a reply to message #7301 ] |
Tue, 09 December 2008 00:35   |
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Diane in MN Messages: 2729 Registered: October 2008 Location: Twin Cities, MN, USA |
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| judith wrote on Mon, 08 December 2008 12:52 |
The Requiem is magnificent. The ending makes my hair stand on end, no matter how many times I sing it or hear it.
The Widor toccata is, I believe, from his Fifth Organ Symphony -- the last movement. That one's pretty good too, but I do love the Sixth.
Another HUGE favorite of mine is Charles Tournemire's "Improvisations sur la Te Deum". It used to open a radio program I listened to in college, and I couldn't for the life of me figure out what it was, because no one ever said what it was. And once it was played on the radio, and I couldn't make out the name of the composer or the name of the work. After many, many years, I FINALLY caught it on the radio and managed to find a copy of a CD while visiting the bookstore at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in NYC. LOVE that piece! I can't find an excerpt to post, but if anyone else can, it's well worth your while.
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Thanks, Judith. I kind of thought that the Widor toccata was from the 5th. I will have to make a note of the Tournemire and see if I can find a copy.
"The point of books is to have way too many but to always feel you never have enough . . . " Louise Erdrich
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| Re: Messiaen, Bartok and Britten [message #7373 is a reply to message #7301 ] |
Tue, 09 December 2008 03:02   |
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Susan from Athens Messages: 817 Registered: October 2008 Location: Athens, Greece |
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| judith wrote on Mon, 08 December 2008 20:52 |
Another HUGE favorite of mine is Charles Tournemire's "Improvisations sur la Te Deum". It used to open a radio program I listened to in college, and I couldn't for the life of me figure out what it was, because no one ever said what it was. And once it was played on the radio, and I couldn't make out the name of the composer or the name of the work. After many, many years, I FINALLY caught it on the radio and managed to find a copy of a CD while visiting the bookstore at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in NYC. LOVE that piece! I can't find an excerpt to post, but if anyone else can, it's well worth your while.
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Here is one excerpt
“I have always imagined heaven to be a kind of library.” –Jorge Luis Borges
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| Re: Messiaen, Bartok and Britten [message #7403 is a reply to message #7080 ] |
Tue, 09 December 2008 16:22   |
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Grinkler Messages: 39 Registered: October 2008 Location: Virginia, USA |
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| Robin wrote: | ...And Bach, who was quite extraordinarily a rebel and a pioneer: a cliché I know but I’m only just learning it for myself...
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Don't worry about it - it takes even most people who study music for their whole lives (including, of course, those who waver off and on for their whole lives) much longer than it took you (you've been studying music hardcore like this only for a few years, right? Or is it even less than that?) to come to appreciate how innovative people like Bach were. I was in the middle of the prelude to one of his cello suites last month when I thought to myself, "Geez, this is actually kind of atonal..." and suddenly had a lot more respect for him than I had two minutes before. XD
And speaking of Bartok, you should hear his Romanian Folk Dances, it RULES! I don't remember if it started out as an orchestral suite or if it was originally for cello and piano - I've played both versions - but it's just so awesome! I think you'd love it. Now I've gotta go find Mikrokosmos!
[Updated on: Tue, 09 December 2008 16:26]
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| Re: Messiaen, Bartok and Britten [message #7404 is a reply to message #7101 ] |
Tue, 09 December 2008 16:32   |
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Grinkler Messages: 39 Registered: October 2008 Location: Virginia, USA |
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| blondviolinist wrote on Sat, 06 December 2008 00:15 | Bartok is one of the composers I could never, ever, live without...Ok, must stop before I spiral off into the heaven of twentieth-century music.
P.S. I don't particularly care for Schoenberg, either, but Hindemith I love. His viola works...
OK, I really must stop.
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AAAHHH I AGREE COMPLETELY!!! Well, I've actually never heard Messiaen, but I agree with everything about Bartok - and Hindemith!! I could curl up and listen to Symphonic Metamorphoses all day long...I heard one of my friends perform a viola piece by Hindemith, and I was totally enthralled the whole time.
And yes, the heaven of twentieth-century music...Shostakovich is the composer I could never live without. I become a complete basket case whenever I listen to his fifth...And then there's Vaughan Williams...Fantasia on a Theme of Thomas Tallis...Okay, now I have to stop too.
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