I used to like his music, but for me it was just a phase, nowadays I absolutely despise most Regards, the Quartet, while his purportedly "spiritual" orchestral stuff strikes me as shallow (just as Gershwin et al.), and don't even get me started on his use of bird-song. Maybe in the future I will discover some great Messiaen work.
I'm not a big fan of the Quartet. If you have some random hatred of bird song, there's not a lot I can recommend to you, although I hope you see how arbitrary something like that is. Same thing as saying "I hate X interval, Y key signature or Z tempo".
I won't question Shostakovich's talent, which many of his detractors do, but my dislike of his music has much to do with my aesthetic ideas; in my book a consistently mediocre composition is superior to one filled with both brilliant movements and trashy movements. Shostakovich composed some great music, which definitely could have been composed only by a genius, but he is often so uneven even within the same piece, that I regard him as very overrated.
I'm not sure how uneven he is as how varied he is, although I'm not entirely disagreeing with you. I think that's coming down more to subjective taste than objective dislike. But then again, it might just be the pieces you're listening to. Really don't know; what do you think of his Piano Sonata No. 2, Symphony Nos. 7/15, Cello Concerto No. 1 and Violin Concerto? Those are probably the most consistently strong works, IMO (along with a couple of the quartets, but I'm too lazy to go listen through them to figure out which ones).
My dislike of Chopin is far more complicated. I genuinely enjoy some of his pieces (the Etudes, the Ballades and a few miscellaneous compositions), but some other works by him I consider almost invariably superficial (the Nocturnes and the Mazurkas, for instance). However, it displeases me when he is presented as a master of counterpoint, when even among the early romantics Mendelssohn and probably Schumann as well were both greater in that respect. It also annoys the hell out of me that he overshadows many great (and relatively accessible) piano composers who are heavily neglected (at least among the mainstream public), such as Medtner, Godowsky, late Liszt, Alkan, Sorabji or even Scriabin.
Seems like that has less to do with Chopin's music, as much as it has to do with his audience. As well, I'd venture a guess that your opinion on Chopin's counterpoint is too heavily influenced by this forum; that crap started up here after someone posted a link to a couple of essays a year or so ago, but I don't hear it anywhere else. As in, nowhere else at all. And I would agree that it is crap.
Perhaps, but Milhaud gets played so little that I would never consider him overrated.
My local NPR station loves him, for some reason.
Boulez once said that a balanced composition has an emotional as well as an intellectual side. While serialism can take some time to insinuate itself into one's mind and I admittedly haven't yet gotten into Babbitt from an intellectual standpoint, I found his music incredibly dry and lacking in emotion; if his music has some intellectual worth, then it's there definitely at the expense of expressivity. Carter, for instance, always wanted to compose intellectual music, yet his work never seems "inhuman" and/or "cold" to me. I've also read criticisms of Babbitt stating that he basically rehashed Webern's techniques and introduced nothing truly original, but that could be false; personally I know next to nothing about "intervallic" serialism.
Babbitt is a mixed bag from a listening aspect. Listen to his Piano Concerto No. 1, and then his Piano Concerto No. 2. No. 1 is an extremely "dry" and pointillist work, while the second is very sonorous. You'll find that disparity in his output a lot. The thing is, it's those "dry" works that have been recorded more, because they're the ones that are more famous. As I said, Babbitt is really more famous from an academic standpoint, and it's his early work that gets played more (because that's where his ideas were, of course), which is sort of a shame. As an aside, Babbitt made a number of innovations to Serial processes (the most important of which is the fact that he invented Total Serialism; he was writing in the idiom before Boulez, and even before Messiaen's little experiments), although he became very much a figurehead and proponent of Modern music in general, and did a lot of writing/teaching. He also had some very important residencies. Hence why we still hear about him. He also predated a lot of Goehr's, Goeyvaert's, Wuorinen's, Pousseur's and Stockhausen's "innovations", and had a pretty impressive resume of "important" students. He was also at the forefront of electronic music in America.
Totally unrelated, but I think your comment about Carter is a bit misguided. Carter was/is vehemently anti-intellectual. It's a bit ironic that you bring him up, as Babbitt and Carter were very much as Stockhausen and Cage were to Boulez.
Out of this list, I'd like to see you justify the inclusion of Schumann, Mendelssohn, Haydn, Wagner, Mahler, Medtner, Reger, Liebermann and Pachelbel. Preliminarily, I will state my belief that virtually no romantic music is as good as Mahler's Symphonies Nos. 6 and 9; the same goes for Wagner's Tristan and Ring.
Not upset about Brahms? So anyway, and superficially:
Haydn- C Major, C Major, C Major, C Major, C Major, C Major, C Major, C Major, C Major, B Major. Repeat six hundred times and you have his output. His music is repetitive, meticulous, overly refined, often devoid of emotional value and his works are too-often extremely similar and derivative. His music is painfully safe and seems to, somehow, simultaneously lack exploration in formula and form
and immediacy and spontaneity. It is morning radio music, and more specifically, Sunday morning.
Pachelbel- Repeat.
Mendelssohn- Repeat, with the addendum of he has a couple (and I might even be using that word literally, just to be clear) of pieces I can actually find a reason to like. The Octet is one of them, and that's the only one that comes to mind, but I just assume there has to be at least one more.
Wagner/Mahler- I like Wagner more than Mahler by quite a bit, firstly. But they are both one thing, and in the case of Mahler, one thing only: massive blobs of FFFF. Wagner's melodic ingenuity and orchestration puts him a couple steps above Mahler, IMO, but I mean. . . the Symphony of 1000 is the perfect example of why I hate them; it seems to beg the question of "how big, bold and loud can we get". I can listen to some seriously aggressive and noisy stuff, but when it's just so tonic and unnecessary, and constant, I find it obnoxious. I don't get the interest in listening to a nine billion hour piece by Mahler at all. With Mahler, I think he is trying to evoke something I'm just not interested in, nor are my ears. With Wagner, he's just ***
exhausting.
Reger- Just worthless. A relic, clinging to the past, combining what I view to be the worst aspects of early Romantic music with the worst aspects of late Romantic music. From the first, excessive and easily anticipated harmonic/modal structures, that never cease and lack any form of spontaneity or surprise, and from the latter, a constant density that wears the listener down and beats him into a pulp. I don't care how excellent he was at counterpoint; if he didn't do something interesting with it, then why should I be interested? His works are certainly "interesting" from the standpoint of difficulty, but that doesn't make a good piece, and I'm just not the type to find a 40 minute set of variations fun to listen to just for what might come up if I analyze them later on.
Schumann- Something of a combination of the reasons I dislike Reger and Mendelssohn; it should be obvious which ones match. Add a "too dry" and that's about it.
Medtner- Medtner I don't despise, like the others you mentioned. I just think he's overrated, that's all. I think he's a fad. He has some decent works, and a ton of mediocre ones. The Night Wind Sonata is a good example of the sort stuff he can do that I really hate: incredibly repetitive, an admittedly pretty (but idiomatic) language, zoloft-inducing melodrama that has no end, and nothing to contrast with. But as I said, I like some of his stuff; I just think he's too easy to like, if you get what I mean, and I think the sudden influx of recordings have bestowed him a new, annoying fan base that he doesn't
quite deserve.
Liebermann- Lowell Liebermann is a Neoromantic composer, and he ain't exactly Carl Vine or John Corigliano, who have such incredible skill for composition that they have an honest place in music. For me to have absolutely any respect for a Neoromantic composer, they pretty much have to be, and even Vine is pretty hit or miss. Liebermann is a sell-out, and he doesn't have the skill or inspiration to show me something new, so I just can't be bothered to feel anything about him other than disgust. Besides that, I simply don't like his music; he seems to get lost in his own work a lot of the time. He'll set up an
ok motif, but then has no idea how to go somewhere with it.