Quote from: Paul Barasi on Monday 04 November 2013, 14:13How about Clairs de lune by Abel Decaux (1869-1943)?
While reading this topic a crazy question came upon me: who composed only one work?
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Show posts MenuQuote from: Paul Barasi on Monday 04 November 2013, 14:13How about Clairs de lune by Abel Decaux (1869-1943)?
While reading this topic a crazy question came upon me: who composed only one work?
Quote from: britishcomposer on Wednesday 19 September 2012, 15:49Her name was Rosemary Brown and I once had the pleasure of meeting her. Without saying that she was definitely not a fake, she went a long way to convincing such people as Richard Rodney Bennett, Hephzibah Menuhin, Ian Parrott, Humphrey Searle and Peter Katin. There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio...
BTW, wasn't there a lady a few decades ago who wrote down works which dead composers 'dictated' her from beyond? So I think we should try to find such a medium and ask her if she could coax our favourite composers to stream a few masterworks via the aether.
This lady was criticised because she could offer only small piano pieces. If Bruckner cared to give us further samples of his genius wouldn't he choose something more spectacular? Finishing his 9th symphony perhaps?
Quote from: Alan Howe on Thursday 06 September 2012, 19:02I agree there's nowt wrong in that. It would put him in exalted company: one could say the same thing about Beethoven as often as not.
I think it's fair to say that the way Rufinatscha develops his ideas is more interesting than the ideas themselves
Quote from: Alan Howe on Friday 31 August 2012, 22:30I hadn't until you threw down the gauntlet, Alan. I looked through the Piano Quintet because it's the later piece (1887) and I must say that I was impressed. He obviously knew how to write effectively for that combination of instruments, keeping the textures clear, open and well-balanced. The opening movement, in compound time, has a persistent dotted motif which is rather Schumannesque; the modulations of the development section are well-judged, carefully placed, and sometimes take one in unexpected directions which helps to construct an interesting architecture. The finale starts out in rumbustious mood but it's not all sound and fury and has well-contrasted episodes.
Has anyone viewed the Piano Quartet or Piano Quintet at IMSLP?
Quote from: pcc on Thursday 30 August 2012, 17:45O, how I want that to be true!
I always think that Horatio Parker passed Ives with a sigh, maybe advising him as he left Yale "you know, Charles, have you ever considered going into something else besides music - insurance, perhaps?..."
Quote from: pcc on Thursday 30 August 2012, 17:45How true. Sullivan's orchestration is masterly: he manages to make a theatre orchestra sound full and rich but not thick, and his tuttis are not all of a piece but are enormously varied.
I don't think anyone questions Sullivan's orchestral mastery or distinctive orchestral idiom.
Quote from: Alan Howe on Thursday 30 August 2012, 09:22Agreed!
No, Ives did just go downhill. Again, a very personal opinion! I'll take Chadwick as a professional orchestrator every time.