Listening, in considerable astonishment, to Kevin Puts's Second Symphony it occurs to me that if the composer had produced this in the early 60s in an American university music school he would have suffered the same fate as Arnold Rosner. His teachers would have utterly rejected the music as unacceptably over-emotional with a ridiculously old-fashioned approach to an outmoded reliance on beauty of utterance.
How the world has changed that music like this is performed by a music conservatory orchestra under a leading conductor when the music of those who condemned and rejected Rosner is, if not forgotten, no longer the Only acceptable music permitted a hearing!!
....and Puts is chair of the Peabody composition faculty rather than being driven into suburban New York obscurity (like Rosner)
My deepest thanks for bringing it to my attention! This is what participation in a music forum is for!!
As far as I'm concerned, the neglect of Arnold Rosner's music is criminal. There is a unique nobility to his music that makes him one of my favorites.