2. There is also a CD intituled "Transcription in the light of harpsichord technique for the modern piano of the Chromatic fantasia of J.S. Bach, followed by a fugue and other piano music and transcriptions Kaikhosru Sorabji" performed by Michael Habermann. Bis, 2003This CD contains several pieces :Rapsodie espagnole / Maurice Raveltranscription pour piano par Sorabji (1945). Passeggiata Veneziana (1956). Variation 56 (Variations for piano and orchestra, version for piano solo). Quasi habanera. Transcription in the light of harpsichord technique for the modern piano of the Chromatic Fantasia of J.S. Bach, followed by a fugue. Pasticcio capricioso sopra op64 No1 dello ChopinIt looks interesting.
3. There is a third CD : "Piano Sonata no 1" by Marc-André Hamelin, Altarus, 1990
You mention Jonathan Powell as a good interpreter of Sorabji's works.
Do you know Hamelin's recordings ?
Michael Habermann
A concerto for solo piano ? A piano symphony ? What the hell is that ?
Hi, everybody ! I've never heard any of Sorabji'music. Though I have heard that it is atonal. I'm not familiar with atonal music. Is it very atonal as Schoenberg, Berg or Webern ? I heard some music of this composers and I couldn't understand it. Should I be familar with atonal music to like Sorabji ?
Sorabji's music is not atonal.
Strictly true, of course, though it does rather depend on what one means by 'tonal'. Anyone whose use of the terms is restricted to 'tonic and dominant' would presumably describe Sorabji's music as atonal!
Much as Will Rogers never met a man he didn't like, I never met an atonal work that I liked. If I have a tool like that for instantly dismissing a piece of music, without needing to think about it, I'm gonna use it. But seriously, the trouble is that people are using the word atonal as a euphemism for terrible-sounding, which clearly isn't technically correct, but shows the lack of good euphemisms. My suggestions would be craggy, thorny, dense, difficult, or just plain bad (clearly there's some bad music out there, right?).Please know that the above in no way refers to Sorabji's music, but rather to the usage of the word atonal. thanks.
If I have a tool like that for instantly dismissing a piece of music, without needing to think about it, I'm gonna use it.
Does anyone know why this sonata has only one movement ?
Personally I find this fellow Sorabji's supposed "music" to be utter nonsense and garbage. I'm absolutely willing to change my current opinion, if anyone cares to persuade me with a convincing argument, or perhaps a composition.
I have no idea what you may or may not have heard of Sorabji's work but, whatever your opinion may or may not be, it should at least be based upon a reasonable amount of listening experience, which is the only thing likely to change it if indeed it can be changed; that said, there is - or should be - a difference between finding that you do not care to listen to something and finding it to be "utter nonsense and garbage", so it would be as well if you can both appreciate and define that difference in some detail before trusting what you believe yourself to "find".
"there is - or should be - a difference between finding that you do not care to listen to something and finding it to be "utter nonsense and garbage",
Well, anne126, if you really have listened to all those pieces listed and you can't delineate what you are supposed to be listening for-I suggest that you and others who simply don't get Sorabji just don't bother those of us who can and do any longer.
I for one have become totally weary of those who can't understand Sorabji as a composer at all-let alone as the very great one that I believe him to be-almost as weary as I am of the 10 year-olds who constantly equate speed of execution with great piano playing.
If you are a good pianist then get a copy of O.C. and study it.
get a copy of O.C. and study it. I got mine from a second-hand shop in Scarborough in 1978-along with a copy of Godowsky's E minor Passacaglia
In regards to what I have "heard" from Sorabji, is the following:Quaere reliqua hujus materiei inter secretiora, for piano St. Bertrand de Comminges ("He Was Laughing in the Tower"), for piano Toccatinetta sopra C. G. F., for piano Passeggiata arlecchinesca sopra un frammento di Busoni, for piano Sutras (2) sul Nome dell'amico Alexis, for piano Sutra per il caro amico quasi Nipote - Alexis Sutras (2) sul Nome dell'amico Alexis, for piano Sutra sul nome dell'amico Alexis Opus clavisymphonicumSymphony No. 3Opus ClavicembalisticumPasseggiata veneziana, for piano Fantasia IspanicaConcerto per suonare da me soloPiano SymphoniesAll of these are from various CDs that I have borrowed, and I must have forgotten some.
I simply went to wikipedia and looked at his list of compositions in order to remember what was on the CDs.
From what I've heard (at least 4 cds worth)—I dislike his music entirely—and my opinion still holds, for me.
Until someone that "understands" these works, that seem only like vain waves of chromaticism, says something, I'm afraid I still think it's nonsense.
So I shall assume there is nothing to say about this composer's work, and it speaks for itself.
There are even those who feel that way about the music of Bach (incredible as that may seem),
Sorabji, as much as I would sympathetically *want* him to be justified as a great composer, for all the notes he wrote, remains a pretender. I listened to Opus Clavicembalisticum at least 5 times (Ogdon), completely, in different months, trying to enjoy and understand the gargantuan production, but the miasma of note-spinning remained largely background piano noise. No further comment at this time.
It does not matter who plays this, it is impossible to polish a turd.
I must warn the buyer of a certain CD (I cannot find it right now but I will) that it contains only 17 minutes of sound (I can't call it "music"). I found this utterly disheartening, that a company would try to sell a product that is not only compositionally poor, but short. A travesty? No -- a blessing.
Sorabji, as much as I would sympathetically *want* him to be justified as a great composer, for all the notes he wrote, remains a pretender. I listened to Opus Clavicembalisticum at least 5 times (Ogdon), completely, in different months, trying to enjoy and understand the gargantuan production, but the miasma of note-spinning remained largely background piano noise. No further comment at this time.I must warn the buyer of a certain CD (I cannot find it right now but I will) that it contains only 17 minutes of sound (I can't call it "music"). I found this utterly disheartening, that a company would try to sell a product that is not only compositionally poor, but short. A travesty? No -- a blessing.
a company would try to sell a product that is not only compositionally poor
it is impossible to polish a turd.
based upon a single hearing of a single performance;
5. You need to accept the fact that some people simply do not like this OC thing.
There are some complex mathematics here.1. nearenough said he had listened to it at least 5 times.2. I said that was 2 more than me.3. This means i have listened to it 3 times.4. I am therefore not basing my comments on hearing a single performance.
You need to accept the fact that some people simply do not like this OC thing.
Personally I do not have the slightest problem with that, assuming (as I do) you did indeed hear the work. What I do have a problem with is that you dismiss the composer and his complete works as "a turd" because you don't like the music you've heard (so far). What you (or I or anyone) likes or dislikes says all about your (or mine or anyone's) taste, nothing about the composer, his work or its performance. I'd guess what Alistair meant is something along these lines, but that's for him to confirm or not, of course!
It was - and I agree - although it hardly matters whether or not anyone might agree, since it's sheer common sense that an averagely intelligent chold of six could grasp without undue difficulty!
Cannot comment, as i have never met an averagely intelligent chold.
I don't wish to pull rank here, but I have listened to that many times, I was present throughout the recording sessions for it, I've heard three of Geoffrey Douglas Madge's six public performances of it as well as his two recordings (each of which were, broadly speaking, taken from his public performances, although the latter recording, on BIS, was taken from one of his live performances that I was unable to attend), I heard John Ogdon's two public performances of it and I have heard three performances of it by Jonathan Powell; does that experiential record suggest that I might be somewhat better qualified to judge my own take on OC than you are to judge yours?
All this suggests to me is that you have a strange idea of what constitutes a good evenings entertainment. If you want to spend 4 hours listening to someone pointlessly banging a piano that is entirely up to you.
I don't care if you have heard the blasted piece a 100 times and are the Worlds greatest authority on this obnoxious absurdity,The piece was written using pen, ink and paper rather than blasted, I have not listened to it 100 times, I am not (nor do I claim to be) the world's greatest authority on it, it is anythying but obnoxious and it is bnot remotely absurd, so you don;t have to care about any of that.Quote from: thalbergmad on July 13, 2009, 02:30:13 PMbut this does not make any difference to my personal preferencesI am not seeking to alter or even criticise your personal preferences.Quote from: thalbergmad on July 13, 2009, 02:30:13 PMnor that of anyone else who has spent time listening to this appalling messApart from the work being neither appalling nor a mess, who are you to speak of or for anyone else in terms of their personal preference for this or anything else? That is where you overstep the mark, Thal - in claiming, overtly or by implication, that your personal preferences typify those of listeners to piano music. In addition to the fact that you have only ever listened to one recording of this piece and have never heard it live, you have not discussed the work with many other people who have listened to one of more performance of it and are therefore in even less of a position to pontificate about their alleged personal opinions than you would be if you had. What you need to do is to accept the fact that there are plenty of people out there who hold the work in high regard and want to listen to it; were that not the case, why do you suppose Altarus still be selling copies of Ogdon's recording 20 years after is original release, why would BIS have issued their recording of Geoffrey Douglas Madge playing it several years later and why would Simon Abrahams go to the trouble of preparing a new typeset edition of it as he is now in the throes of doing?Best,Alistair
but this does not make any difference to my personal preferences
nor that of anyone else who has spent time listening to this appalling mess
What you need to do is to accept the fact that there are plenty of people out there who hold the work in high regard and want to listen to it
Good, i am very happy for them. What you need to get into YOUR head is that there are also people who don't like the work.
It has nothing to do with how many live recordings they have heard or how many people they have discussed it with. It is nothing to do with having the intelligence of a 6 year old chold or whether they could smell the pianists armpits whilst turning the pages. It is simply a matter of personal taste. No more or no less.
I do not think that listening to this again and again by different pianists would make any difference to my PERSONAL view.
However if this long heralded recording you keep prattling on about ever actually happens, I will gladly dedicate a few megs of hard drive space if i am still alive.
Perhaps Richard Clayderman would do as good a job as anyone else.
Thank goodness you at last appreciate that!
(a) I do not "keep prattling on about" it
I have always appreciated that, but you appear to be the one with the problem in accepting that some people do not like this piece and they do not have to have listened to it for 500 times in order to express their dislike.
It was mentioned in another one of your posts only today
and in God knows how many others over the years of your membership.
I only pray this "Holy Grail" of a recording happens sooner than later, as the suspense is killing me.
Undoubtedly Amazon will need to hire another warehousman to cope with the demand.