could you tell me your feelings on ALKAN? im just curious as to how you feel about his music...
what you think is good , bad, etc?
thank u...
i see that it doesnt interest you, is that because you find it superficial? what composers do you tend to gravitate towards from the 19th century...?
This is completely personal and has nothing to do with the merits of the composer. Also I am talking here about music that I want/do not want to
play. There are many pieces I like immensely to listen to, but have no desire to play. There are other pieces I have no desire to play or to listen to. And finally there are pieces that are a pleasure both to play and to listen to.
Consider the matter of piano concertos. I love most of them, yet I am not be interested in playing any of them for the very simple reason that not being a professional performer my chances of ever getting to play a concert with an orchestra are pretty much nil. So there is little point and the time I would spend in such an ultimately futile endeavour can be best spent learning and playing one of the thousands of piano solo pieces that are on my list.
Now consider the matter of certain specific composers like Alkan and Rachmaninoff. My hands are not that big. I would be able to play certain of these pieces with great difficulty and the results would not be very satisfactory. Therefore I must take into account my physical limitations and look for repertory that is ideally suited to me personally. As you can see it has nothing to do with the merits of the composer/composition.
Finally there is the matter of my personal taste. I have got to the point of my life where I can learn whatever I want to learn (I have the technology – and I don’t need to conform to any syllabus or list of required pieces). And there is much I want to learn. So I have to get on with it and not get distracted by stuff I don’t care very much about, stuff that I am not ideally physically fitted to tackle and stuff that would require so much ancillary support (like an orchestra) that would be unlikely to come to fruition.
My taste has changed over the years. As a teenager I could never get enough of Chopin. Nowadays I cannot bear another Waltz or Mazurka or Nocturne. In fact the only pieces I still like are his preludes and Studies. I was never particularly crazy about Lizst, although he is without a doubt one of the greatest romantic composers (I love Gnomenreigen though).
Just to show you how my personal taste does not necessarily imply the greatness or inferiority of a composer, Mendelssohn is one of my favourites and yet I would probably have to say that he is a minor composer (for the piano at any rate). A major minor composer, but a minor composer nevertheless. And the same applies to Grieg, another composer I cannot get enough of.
Alkan on the other hand, although I am not particularly attracted to his music (I love his Esquisses though) is definitely a major composer, of the same ilk as Chopin, Liszt and Schumann. Underrated, but major nevertheless. And I am not that keen on Brahms - another major, amazing composer that I much admire and yet do not like all that much.
At the moment, my favourite 19th century composer is Schumann. There is incredible depth and originality there. His music stands out immediately as something really special. Even his children pieces (Album for the young) are masterpieces.
In general I like specific pieces, rather than wholesale composers. For instance, I love Schubert’s Impromptus, but cannot stomach much else that he wrote.
Ultimately there are two different criteria for music appreciation: an objective one, where you analyse a piece and stand in awe at the composer’s greatness of vision, his skill in handling form and structure, his inventiveness in bending the rules and yet sticking with them, his daring in doing away with rules altogether and creating his own universe of sound. This is really intellectual.
And then there are emotional criteria. This is basically a primeval reaction to music: “I love it”, “I hate it”. There is no analysis, no argument, no explanation.
Ideally one should inform the other: We might discover great intellectual depths in music we instantly like, and conversely we might come to like music we initially disliked – or were indifferent to - through an effort at understanding it .
However it is also possible to understand deeply the greatness of a composition and nevertheless dislike it intensely. As it is possible to love something we do not really understand at all.
And finally there is music that is like a time bomb. We think we don’t like it, and yet in due time it will explode us to smithereens.
Best wishes,
Bernhard.