The Art-Music, Literature and Linguistics Forum
April 18, 2024, 04:40:28 am
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?

Login with username, password and session length
News: Here you may discover hundreds of little-known composers, hear thousands of long-forgotten compositions, contribute your own rare recordings, and discuss the Arts, Literature and Linguistics in an erudite and decorous atmosphere full of freedom and delight.
 
  Home Help Search Gallery Staff List Login Register  

Faust symphonies

Pages: 1 [2]   Go Down
  Print  
Author Topic: Faust symphonies  (Read 2056 times)
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
ahinton
Level 6
******

Times thanked: 30
Offline Offline

Posts: 837


View Profile WWW
« Reply #15 on: February 09, 2015, 06:16:09 pm »

Hello Inky, and welcome to these boards. You may recognise the forum software from somewhere? :)

AFAIK Busoni's principle rage was reserved for Wagner, who annoyed him so greatly that he wouldn't even name him in his lectures.. referring to "that man" or "Herr W".  Considering that Busoni had, by that stage, emigrated to Berlin to lecture, this was something like criticising the home side.  His disgust with Wagner arose from the "damage" he believed Der Meister had done with TRISTAN & ISOLDE, eating away at the traditional concept of tonality.  I believe he did respect Schoenberg as a man, and for his serious-minded approach - even though he saw no future himself in dodecaphonic experiments.
Well, whatever Busoni might have thought of such experiments, the first published fruits of Schönberg's appeared only in 1924, the very year in which Busoni died, so it would hardly have been possible for Busoni to avail himself of sufficient opportunity to form a considered opinion of Schönbergian dodecaphony by studying his dodecaphonic scores and listening to that music. Whilst you are correct in referring to Busoni's criticisms of Wagner, any "damage" that Wagner might be thought to have done by "eating away at the traditional concept of tonality" might as easily be ascribed to that which Busoni himself did in works such as his second sonatina for piano. That said, Wagner did seem rather to shrink back a little from the loosening of the bonds of such traditional tonality, especially in his final completed work Parsifal, just as Strauss was later to do following Salome and Elektra (and, whilst Busoni certainly expressed various reservations about Strauss, he not only admired him as a conductor but also described Salome as "a throw of genius"). Another example of drawing back from the brink of a perceived abyss is Ornstein who felt the need to do so following his sonata for violin and piano of 1915. It would have been interesting to discover what Busoni thought about Schönberg writing his E flat minor chamber symphony after quite a few dodecaphonic works had Busoni only survived for a further 15 years or so.

I wholeheatedly endorse your encomium for Busoni's final opera; incidentally, in addition to the Beaumont completion, Stevenson also made one (well before Beaumont's, I believe) but I've not seen it and it's never been published.
Report Spam   Logged

Pages: 1 [2]   Go Up
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

Powered by EzPortal
Bookmark this site! | Upgrade This Forum
SMF For Free - Create your own Forum


Powered by SMF | SMF © 2016, Simple Machines
Privacy Policy