Easy one that everyone can answer Dutilleux, Roslavets, Prin, Mosolov, Scriabin, Sorabji, Ferneyhough, Finnissy, Boulez, Penderecki, Lutoslawski, Bartok, Liszt, Alkan, Schnittke, Ginastera, Varese, Sciarrino, Xenakis, Donatoni, Vine, Rzewski, Rautavaara and Britten.
Scandalous in what sense?
most classical musicians would not even know who Roslavets is - and I wouldn't blame them for it.
Pluss the fact that so many people find music without clear tonality difficult to listen to.
Roslavets if I remember correctly was send to Siberia or some other remote place, and was made some kind non-person.
His music was never played after some of his music was considered "art for the sake of art". Since so few people played Roslavets how could people now if his music was great? Through scores, yes, but his scores were very very rare. The other opption was through recordings or live performances. Sadly they were of course non-existent.
The only not-so-reasent Roslavets recording I am aware of is of his Sonata for viola & piano (1930) by Mikhail Muntian and Yuri Bashmet. That is one recording, so you can't really blame musicians for not knowing about his music. I.M.O, that basicly rules out no1 to. Because extremely few people would know that his music is great.
So in my oppinion the fact that his music is so rarely played is not scandalous, but much more sad. You can't really blame musicians for the fact that his music is so little known. Of course I wish that his music should become more well known.
interesting. i think i've only seen roslavet's name in passing. i really don't recall ever hearing any of his music. will have to go listen.
do have a listen.
before you run into trouble, his name is nikolai roslavets. dont leave that last s off.
to have a quick 'one step' is faster.
to me - the voice is the most basic of all the instruments. if you understand voice - you can do pretty much anything with melodies. although - somehow chopin (did he write for voice?) seems to give the piano it's own voice.
ahinton, you did it again! must you remind me at every turn.
i cannot say anything anymore that remotely sounds pol -ish.
and, yet...you add so much spice to the music conversation.
and how did that polonaise-fantasy go?
i would have really liked to hear the entire concert. alas. my son needing four wisdom teeth out - greatly impacted my planned trip. i had already gotten the necessary passport picture and the airplane reservations. just needed the ok on the money - which it was pretty cheap $425. or something for a trip to glasgow. truly, i was a bit relieved to find out that i wasn't going though because november weather can be a bit cold in britain - and i don't like travelling alone. when you mentioned south america - that sounded a bit better. you know, some warm weather.
how warm does it get in the summer in london?
favorite composer: alistair hinton - i know this because you put so much personality into yourself - that your music must surely be full of personality, too.
Do you have a link to a sample of that? Or is it only available through a recording?
hah i knew that would tickle a few grieg lovers' fancies. i dont have a link. i have the actual recording. donna amato recorded it. if you check online, im sure you can find a small sample.
Interesting that you include Roslavets in your list; it also prompts me to ask if you have yet heard the relatively recent Hyperion disc (CDA67484) of the early orchestral symphonic poem In the Hours of the New Moon and (as the main work) the world première of the recently discovered Chamber Symphony (BBCSSO/Volkov). The latter work, which comes from the mid-1930s (i.e. at around the time that Shostakovich was writing his Fourth Symphony) is a fascinating piece occupying almost an hour and whose frequent recourse to what someone once described as "neurĉsthenic counterpoint" makes parts of it sound almost as though it might be Schönberg's Kammersymphonie Nr. 1½. I'd be interested to know if you've gotten this yet and, if so, what you make of it; it's scandalous that music of this quality has lain almost entirely ignored for so long and it is certainly in many ways quite unusual for a Russian composer of the time.Best,Alistair
id love to hear that new hyperion disk. the sample of the scherzo from the chamber symphony on the website was stunning. i too have loved almost everything ive heard by roslavets. are there any new projects that are in progress that you know of, alistair? his chamber music is some of the most interesting i have come across.
alkan, barber, beethoven, bolcom, bortkiewicz, chopin, dohnányi, ginastera, kapustin, ligeti, liszt, lutosławski, medtner, messiaen, prokofiev, rachmaninoff, rautavaara, ravel, respighi, scriabin, szymanowski, vine, vladigerov.
There is only one person I'm not familiar with on that list (Boucourechliev). It seems like he just went through some modern music encyclopedia and just picked off names.
Dutilleux, Roslavets, Prin, Mosolov, Scriabin, Sorabji, Ferneyhough, Finnissy, Boulez, Penderecki, Lutoslawski, Bartok, Liszt, Alkan, Schnittke, Ginastera, Varese, Sciarrino, Xenakis, Donatoni, Vine, Rzewski, Rautavaara and Britten.
i'm only familiar with 9 people on that list!