Berthold Goldschmidt: Orchestral Music

Tempo ◽  
1984 ◽  
pp. 12-16
Author(s):  
Colin Matthews

With his major work, the opera Beatrice Cenci, unperformed apart from extracts, his other opera Der gewaltige Hahnrei not revived professionally since its highly successful première more than 50 years ago, the Second Quartet having to wait 17 years for its première, the remarkably original Kästner settings of 1931 still awaiting a performance, it is clear that it is not only Berthold Goldschmidt's orchestral works that have been ‘undeservedly neglected’.But of these orchestral works only one can in any sense be said to have entered the repertoire, and that, ironically, is one of Goldschmidt's very earliest works—the Comedy of Errors Overture of 1925. It is his only orchestral score in print. The three concertos—the Cello Concerto (1953), Clarinet Concerto (1954), and Violin Concerto (1951–5)—received a fair number of performances during the 1950'5 (not all of them under Goldschmidt's baton), but have virtually disappeared, along with the inventive Sinfonietta of 1945. Perhaps the least deserving of the obscurity into which they have temporarily fallen are the Ciaconna Sinfonica (1936) and the Mediterranean Songs (1958)—both of them works of real power and substance, and immediately approachable.

2019 ◽  
Vol 16 (16) ◽  
pp. 225-241
Author(s):  
Oleksandr Lysychka

Background. In researches belonging to the domain of music history, revealing of general trajectory of artists’ evolution and defining its character either as stable or flexible becomes one of the most important tasks. This allows to make conclusions of the way composers’ creative life interacts with the cultural context of his time, to define degree of interdependency of individual style and epochal. In the end, this work becomes a foreground for periodization of artists’ creative life, that is a prerequisite of historical comprehension of his legacy. Three-partite periodization of E. Elgar’s creative life seems to be rather typical on the face of it, but in fact it reflects quite peculiar trajectory of his professional growth, chiefly because the last period largely negates achievements of the former two. This reveal striving of E. Elgar to find completely new way of organisation of musical material on different levels. Moreover, general tendency towards economy of musical material, accentuating of “aphoristic” density of expression, found in the works of this timespan, allow to consider this period as late one, as they are typological features of this stage of composer’s creative life. The aim of the research is to unveil congregation of features allowing to regard orchestral works of E. Elgar in the 1910s as an attempt to renew his composing style. Thus, the leading tasks were generalisation of analytical observations on the Second Symphony, symphonic study “Falstaff” and Cello Concerto as well as comparison of these results with acquired by analysis if E. Elgar’s works in 1900s. Methodology. In order to reach the abovementioned goal several typical methods of musically-historic research have been deployed. First and foremost, it is genre-stylistic one, allowing to locate the meaning of given work in the context of musical culture. To define the differences between two styles a comparative method has been used. Classification of E. Elgar’s late period of creative life as one of three most common types, according to N. Savytska, uses her conception, regarded in doctoral thesis if this scholar. Results. One of the most peculiar traits of E. Elgar’s creative life is his way of acquiring compositional craftsmanship – a way that he went completely on his own. A mention of this starts one of the most recent books on the composer (McVeagh, 2013: 114), but it doesn’t get universal significance, even in spite of the fact that self-learning became a principle of E. Elgar’s professional growth both before and after worldwide recognition as outstanding composer. Analysis of his orchestral works from “Enigma” Variations (op. 38, 1899) up to the Violin Concerto (op. 61, 1910) allows to detect a single direction of development of composer’s arsenal of devices, his genre-stylistic inclinations, special features of themes and methods of working with them, harmony, orchestration etc. Thus, E. Elgar demonstrates a very noticeable tendency to a system usually associated with Late-Romantic symphonism of lyrically-dramatic type: overwhelming emotionality of music, prevalence of large and complicated structures and abundant orchestral resources, rather dense orchestral texture and usage of two harmonic systems: diatonic and chromatic. Moreover, research on the works, composed between abovementioned two, allows to trace gradual crystallisation of these principles, their generalisation in the First Symphony and final confirmation in the Violin Concerto. On this background, appearance of composition like “Falstaff” (ор. 68, 1913) and even Second Symphony (ор. 63, 1911) was truly of revolutionary nature as it was the first attempt to change general line of development. Conclusions. Late period of E. Elgar’s creative life, started in 1911 with the composition of the Second Symphony, can not be entirely classified as any of three types, defined by N. Savytska (2010: 24–25): composer is characterised by traits of both reduced and prognostic periods. Such paradoxicality can be explained by the fact that E. Elgar, on the one hand, decided to abstain from composition after 1919, and on the other – by radical innovation of creative method in 10s and beginning of the work on the Third Symphony shortly before his death in 1934. Signs of the third, consolidating type of period might be seen in tempering the innovative radicality of “Falstaff” in Cello Concerto. Traits of E. Elgar’s creativity after 1911 can be generally comprehended as inclination to move away from the framework of late-romantic style, that played the prominent role during all his life. Composer experiments with deploying absolutely new themes in means of stylistics (connected with songs, dances and marches), appeals to unequivocally humorous plots, eludes complex thematic relations, intonational fabula as well as exceeding density of orchestral texture. Moreover, the comprehension of the time itself changes as it becomes much more concentrated: E. Elgar abandons protracted circumlocutionary expanding of the structure as the expression of ideas in comparison to precedent works becomes more condensed. It seems almost impossible to state the reasons for these changes, but we should propose two hypotheses: of immanent evolution and of external impact. The first one is founded in overly-expressive Late-Romantic symphonic cycle being pushed to its limit in the First Symphony and then repeated in the Violin Concerto in different genre conditions – further reproduction of this model would have led to arid copying and stagnation. The second hypothesis considers radical innovations of musical art that took place in the 1920s, and in this case, metamorphoses are explained by communicative reasoning of the composer, for he was critiqued for his style being “outdated” before.


10.31022/c040 ◽  
1994 ◽  

Although sacred vocal music by Mozart's predecessors and contemporaries in Salzburg has been widely studied, symphonies and other orchestral works by many of these composers remain unknown. Yet the repertory of Salzburg symphonies represents the earliest orchestral music to which Mozart was exposed, and its influence can be seen not only among his earliest symphonies, composed in London, Paris, and Holland in 1764–66, but also among the numerous symphonies and serenades of the 1770s. This edition includes previously unavailable orchestral works by three generations of Salzburg composers: the court violoncellist Caspar Christelli (ca. 1706–66) and the court concertmaster Ferdinand Seidel (ca. 1700–73); vice-Kapellmeister Leopold Mozart (1719–87); and the court violinists Wenzel Helbelt (ca. 1736–69) and Joseph Hafeneder (1746–84).


Tempo ◽  
1950 ◽  
pp. 16-23
Author(s):  
John S. Weissmann

It has often been said that the greatness of an artist depends on his relation to the legacy of previous epochs and on his attitude to the intellectual impulses of his time. His awareness of these factors, conditioned by his response towards the obligations of society, will determine the value of his own contribution.In Kodály's case investigation was hitherto centred mainly on his choral music: it is now proposed to examine his two large-scale, purely orchestral works of comparatively recent date.


1976 ◽  
Vol 24 (4) ◽  
pp. 169-176 ◽  
Author(s):  
John M. Geringer

The purpose of this study was to investigate tuning preferences regarding recorded orchestral music. Specifically, the study was designed to test subjects' tuning preferences while investigating both the direction and magnitude of mistuning. Sixty randomly selected undergraduate and graduate music students modulated a variable speed tape recorder to preferred pitch levels. Stimuli were recorded excerpts of ten orchestral works, each representative of a different key. Subjects listened to the thirty-second excerpts and turned a linear continuous-speed control knob with a pitch range of approximately an augmented fourth. Data consisted of cent deviation scores relative to A = 440 Hz. Results indicated a marked propensity to tune these excerpts sharper than their recorded pitch level. Subjects' responses indicated the mean cent deviation for sharp tunings to be 149.29 cents (approximately 11/2 semi-tones); when tuning flat, the mean deviation was 88.43 cents.


Author(s):  
Sharon Mirchandani

This chapter focuses on Marga Richter's shorter, more fragmented works that had little or no development and were not as expansive as her earlier (and later) pieces. Unlike other U.S. composers in the 1960s such as Edgard Varèse and Milton Babbitt, Richter did not gravitate toward total serialism, electronic music, or chance music, although she reluctantly responded to the trend of composing sparse, economical, and atonal works. An encounter with composer William Sydeman at the Bennington Composers Conference was influential in steering Richter toward the prevailing attitudes of the day. This chapter discusses some of Richter's more concise compositions during the 1960s, including short solo and chamber music scores such as Fragments for solo piano; choral works like Psalm 91 for mixed chorus for mixed chorus; and the modern ballet score, Abyss for the Harkness Ballet. It also considers Richter's compositional retreat at a family residence in Shrewsbury, Vermont, and her self-admitted tendency to suffer from a letdown following elation from a performance or completion of a major work.


Notes ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 50 (4) ◽  
pp. 1451
Author(s):  
William K. Kearns ◽  
Richard Koshgarian ◽  
Jeffrey H. Renshaw

1970 ◽  
Vol 111 (1530) ◽  
pp. 812
Author(s):  
Hugh Ottaway ◽  
Shostakovich ◽  
Kogan ◽  
Moscow Philharmonic SO ◽  
Kondrashin ◽  
...  

Tempo ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 58 (230) ◽  
pp. 86-87
Author(s):  
Guy Rickards

LEE HYLA: Bass Clarinet Concerto1; Trans; Violin Concerto2. 1Tim Smith (bass cl), 2Laura Frautschi (vln), Boston Modern Orchestra Project c. Gil Rose. New World 80614-2


Tempo ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 61 (241) ◽  
pp. 2-21
Author(s):  
Christopher Dingle

The prevailing image of Messiaen in the 1930s is of an organist-composer. One of the first things learnt about him is that he was organist at the church of the Trinité in Paris, having been appointed at the spectacularly young age of 22. As the earliest (though not the first) of Messiaen's works to have been published, the short organ piece Le Banquet céleste (1928) is, quite rightly, the focus of close examination for its precocious assurance. The 1930s were punctuated by the substantial organ cycles La Nativité du Seigneur (1935) and Les Corps glorieux (1939), so it is no surprise to find Felix Aprahamian's article for the fifth edition of Grove describing Messiaen as being a ‘French organist and composer”, and later observing that ‘although it was as a composer of organ music that in pre-war years Messiaen's name first attracted attention, he had already composed a quantity of vocal music’. Fifty years later, Paul Griffiths similarly observed that ‘Organ works featured prominently in his output of the next decade [1930s], but so did music about his family’. According to Harry Halbreich, ‘one can say that before 1940, Messiaen was essentially an organist-composer’, while, Malcolm Hayes concludes his chapter on the early orchestral music in The Messiaen Companion by stating that ‘to judge from the idiom of his works written in the 1930s, he had once seemed destined to spend his creative life within the narrow confines of the organ loft’.


2020 ◽  
pp. 234-280
Author(s):  
Andrea F. Bohlman

The chapter presents the history of one patriotic and Catholic hymn, “God Save Poland” (1816), to take a long historical view and gesture toward the real power of imagined musical solidarity. The hymn was ubiquitous in Poland in the 1980s and exemplifies the saturation of symbols at the heart of Solidarity’s nationalist enterprise, even showing this nationalism to be driven by song. A performance history of the song reveals its constant position as both a hymn of Polish Catholicism and a galvanizing refrain at the secularized scenes of popular uprisings. At times the song has challenged Catholicism as normative for Polish identity, at times confirmed it. Collective song’s communicative power is also articulated in Krzysztof Meyer’s Polish Symphony (1982). The symphony, like other art music examples across Musical Solidarities, suggests that, despite their abnegation of political entanglement, composers, too, joined in the core musical strategies of the opposition.


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