Alfred Schnittke (1934-1998)

Started by Maciek, April 29, 2007, 01:00:45 PM

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Mandryka

Quote from: CRCulver on June 20, 2024, 02:51:04 AMKevin Karnes' recent books on Arvo Pärt rather highlight how that composer got lucky from a marketing perspective: Pärt's association with ECM meant that in the public imagination today, he seems to have come out of 1980s West Germany. . .  Consequently, as large-scale public interest in Soviet dissident art waned, he wasn't affected.

@CRCulver Why do you think Shostakovich is so popular?

Wovon man nicht sprechen kann, darüber muss man schweigen

CRCulver

Quote from: Mandryka on June 20, 2024, 10:45:36 AM@CRCulver Why do you think Shostakovich is so popular?

I'd argue it is because he got canonical status long ago. Indeed, he is often called one of the last composers to do so. The relationship between him and the Soviet state has become just one biographical detail, and he gets programmed just because he has always been programmed.

Mandryka

Quote from: CRCulver on June 20, 2024, 10:51:02 AMI'd argue it is because he got canonical status long ago. Indeed, he is often called one of the last composers to do so. The relationship between him and the Soviet state has become just one biographical detail, and he gets programmed just because he has always been programmed.

This is maybe of interest if you don't already know it

https://www.some.ox.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/2.-Weber-1999-The-history-of-musical-canon.pdf
Wovon man nicht sprechen kann, darüber muss man schweigen

DavidW

Quote from: CRCulver on June 20, 2024, 10:34:04 AMThe answer is, in fact, no. You know this is something that can be easily checked, right? Have a look at the Discogs entry for Schnittke and filter by releases where he is the composer. You'll see that the majors recorded Schnittke frequently in the 1990s, but then that dropped off; later releases are almost solely reissues of those 1990s recordings.

Okay I looked. Harmonia Mundi, DG, Pentatone all have releases in the past several years that are not just reissues. My favorite is the Jurowski recording of the third. But I have a feeling that you're stuck in the past with what you consider a major label. So here is a DG recording from 2021 as an example:

https://www.discogs.com/release/17309128-Schnittke-Daniel-Hope-Alexey-Botvinov-Works-For-Violin-And-Piano


SurprisedByBeauty

#1324
Greetings, fellow Schnittke-heads: I've been part of a little YouTube podcast (#ClassicalDiscoveries) where we explore, well, music worth discovering... and I was wondering if I could show it here, to get some feedback and especially criticism (maybe a bit beyond "you guys suck", although I can see that, too) from people well into that sort of thing. And perhaps take cues as to what we should be doing and covering.

This is about his Film Music for the tripartite TV-movie by Mikhail Schweitzer on Pushkin's "Little Tragedies" with a Faust prologue. I ended up reading the Pushkin for this and watched the first and second part of the film (they're available on YouTube, all), which was great fun and edifying. I hope you don't find this too annoying. (Though we try!)

(I don't quite know where to post this, without being obnoxious, but I thought this might be the right thread. I will also post our video of Braunfels' "Jeanne d'Arc", Mahler (his Beethoven "Retuschen") and Miklos Rozsa ("Beyond Ben Hur") in those composers' threads.)

Classical Discoveries - #002 Alfred Schnittke: The FILM MUSIC EDITION