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Messages - Alan Howe

#15886
Recordings & Broadcasts / Re: Ernest Reyer
Saturday 06 June 2009, 23:29
I listened to Act 1 of Sigurd today - very much French grand opera, but with a dose of Berlioz too, I thought. It is very declamatory stuff - I'm hoping Act 2 will relax a bit, but wow, it's powerful music.
#15887
George Frederick Bristow and John Knowles Paine. I particularly like Bristow's Symphony in F sharp minor on Chandos - marvellous Mendelssohnian stuff!
#15888
Composers & Music / Re: Classical Music Magazines
Saturday 06 June 2009, 10:18
Like Mark, I read IRR - it's much better than Gramophone in that its reviews are in greater depth. It also reviews releases of more unusual repertoire (e.g. the Dietrich works on cpo) which its rival won't touch.

Otherwise I agree that Fanfare is excellent - but very expensive to subscribe to from the UK. I gave up my subscription for that reason. It's also very bulky to keep, being in a paperbook book format.
#15889
I don't really know anything apart form what I've already posted. I don't even know whether there will actually be a Klughardt cycle - although I hope there will be.

If you want me to guess: I believe that Dutton will record the Cliffe VC with Philippe Graffin and the BBC Concert Orchestra conducted by David Lloyd-Jones, although the English Music Festival programme which includes details of the performance on May 23rd at Dorchester Abbey doesn't give any hints that this is the case. As I said, just a guess...
#15890
Having now heard a dub of the radio performance of the Klughardt VC which will form the basis for the cpo release, I can honestly say that I believe this to be a major addition to the late-19thC violin concerto repertoire.

The concerto is 42 minutes long, making it just a bit longer than the Brahms VC. It consists of a long, mainly serene first movement which is connected to the glorious slow movement by means of a dramatic declamatory section for both soloist and orchestra. The finale marries fanfare-like material with what sounds like folk-inspired themes. The overall mood is one of relaxed lyricism and contentment.

And the idiom? Well, the breadth is definitely Brahmsian and the idiom is conservative for the mid 1890s, but overall it is a most beautiful and memorable work. Certainly a missing gem.
#15891
Composers & Music / Re: How did it start - for you?
Friday 05 June 2009, 20:24
Isn't it the Melartin symphonies on Ondine? There is a set of the Madetoja symphonies on Chandos.
#15892
The problem I have is often entirely the opposite: something which I find immediately attractive may - for me at any rate - not actually have much staying power; something which is also attractive, but which gives up its secrets more slowly may actually do more for me. I really enjoy going back to a piece and finding more in it each time...
#15893
I don't have the time to go into much of an answer - except to say that opinions about music need to have time to develop and settle. I, for example, find Martucci's symphonies intensely memorable - I can hear the first movement of the second symphony in my mind's ear, so to speak, even as I write this. But then, I've known probably known the symphonies for at least five years.

It's certainly not fair on Martucci to make a comparison with Raff who was one of the great tunesmiths of the nineteenth century - any more than it is fair on, say, Brahms to compare him with Tchaikovsky in the memorability department. Some composers simply exert a much more immediate appeal than others.

With the unsung we have to make an effort to listen to them because in the normal course of events we would not encounter them, e.g. on the radio or in the concert hall. This means that there is a special need to give them time to 'sink in', as it were.

Let me give you a personal example; I was originally led to the symphonies of Franz Lachner by our good friend, John White. Unfortunately, I just didn't spend long enough on them when I first heard them to understand the sort of epic symphony which he was attempting to write, I believe, in the wake of the 9th Symphony of his close friend, Schubert. It was in fact the prolonged process of coming to grips with the hour-long Rufinatscha 6 (firstly through the recording of the version for piano 4-hands) which prompted me to give Lachner the sort of attention which I hadn't given him first time round. I now find Lachner's symphonies fitting into a symphonic strand which had once seemed to me to be rather difficult to discern (i.e. Schubert 8/9>Lachner5/8>Rufinatscha 4/5/6>Bruckner).

'Unsung' for me just means 'neglected' - and where this is coupled with an apparent injustice (there is plenty of justly unsung music too!), then you have something worth pursuing.

#15894
Composers & Music / Re: Symphony wish list.
Tuesday 02 June 2009, 16:04
They'd have to be good: Stanford 1 is a glorious piece.
#15895
Suggestions & Problems / Re: New old news?
Tuesday 02 June 2009, 14:10
I'll have to leave the practicalities to Mark; for myself I don't think it matters much whether old topics are repeated: there are often new recordings to discuss and, after all, opinions grow and change over time...
#15896
Composers & Music / Re: Symphony wish list.
Tuesday 02 June 2009, 07:53
There are two symphonies by Krommer available on Chandos - samples here...

http://www.jpc.de/jpcng/SESSIONID/fb2168f227aec203db41480801eeeed3/classic/detail/-/art/Franz-Krommer-Symphonien-op-40-op-102/hnum/7061471

...and at least two others which haven't been recorded.
#15897
Composers & Music / Re: Symphony wish list.
Sunday 31 May 2009, 22:55
These are good suggestions in respect of the first half of the 19th century. As for later in the century, these would be mine:
1. Bargiel C major
2. Rudorff 1-3
3. Berger W. 1 & 2
4. Noskowski 1-3
5. Cliffe 2
6. Klughardt 2, 4, 5 (1 & 3 are in the pipeline)
7. Abert 1-3 & 5-7
8. Hofmann Frithjof
9. Jadassohn 2-4
10. Sgambati 2
11. Grimm D minor
12. Becker A. G minor
13. Reinthaler D major
14. Munzinger A major
15. Grädener C. C minor
16. Hiller G major; E minor
17. Scharwenka P. 1 & 2
18. Stojowski D minor
#15898
Composers & Music / Re: Violin Concerto Wishlist!
Sunday 31 May 2009, 17:27
I knew Chandos had also done the Conus - but couldn't locate it. Now I remember the problem with the transliteration of the composer's name!

As for the Brüll VC, I didn't mean to give you the hurry-up, Gareth - I was just reporting what I had understood of Cameo's plans. Apologies.
#15899
Composers & Music / Re: Violin Concerto Wishlist!
Sunday 31 May 2009, 09:52
As I've said before, my hope is that Naxos will turn their attention to the many unrecorded VCs which have rather more substance than those churned out by the 19thC violinist-composers.

The Mlynarski VC2 was indeed recorded by Kennedy - but Kulka is just as good.

I think we can expect Cameo Classics to be planning to record the whole of the Brüll VC in the near future. A coupling in the form of a VC by another Germano-Jewish composer would seem to be appropriate...
#15900
Composers & Music / Re: Violin Concerto Wishlist!
Saturday 30 May 2009, 23:23
The Conus has been recorded by David Garrett on DG - an excellent modern performance. The Mlynarski (VC2) was also recorded in 1990 by Konstanty Kulka on the Polskie Nagrania label.