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Favourite piece of 20th century music (Rest is Noise centric)

Linked to The Rest is Noise festival in London this year, the Guardian have just published this:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2012/nov/29/rest-is-noise-festival-favourites

Apart from all the usual suspects, there are some interesting choices in there too - notably Sibelius, Harvey and Bryars.

Also interesting how there's nothing from Berio, Cage, Boulez, Part, Xenakis, Carter etc...

So do any of you have a favourite piece of 20th century music?

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  • How is Sibelius not one of the most obvious of usual suspects?

    Other than maybe the fact that they've chosen 7 where most lists might pick 5 (I'd go for 2 or 3, personally...).

    • Anyway, no, I don't have a favourite piece of 20th century music (by which I'm taking you to mean "classical" music composed in the 20th century).

      What I do have is a very very long list of quote-unquote 20th century music I love and which, seeing as it's Friday night and I'm a few sheets to the wind, I have no qualms typing out a small selection of even though I know nobody gives the remotest of flying fucks.

      So yeah, top tier (and contenders for "favourite"):

      Alfvén - Symphony 4 and the 1st (maybe also the 2nd?) Swedish Rhapsody
      Prokofiev - Alexander Nevsky
      Sibelius - fucking everything, but for the sake of argument we'll say Symphonies 2 + 3 and the Finlandia hymn and maybe the Lemminkainen suite and Nightride & Sunrise
      Shostakovich - Piano Concerto 2
      Rautavaara - Cantus Arcticus
      Bantock - Celtic Symphony
      Glière - Symphony 2
      Vaughan Williams - too much, again, but let's go with Symphonies 6 + 7 and the English Folk Song Suite and the Lark Ascending because I'm not tryhard enough to pretend otherwise, and also the Serenade to Music because I can
      Bax - Symphony 6
      Rodrigo - Concierto de Aranjuez
      de Falla - Noches en los Jardines de España
      Pärt - Cantus in Memory of Benjamin Britten
      Respighi - Pini di Roma

      Second tier (hardly worth separating, really, but I've done it now):
      Glass - Low Symphony
      Richard Strauss - Alpine Symphony
      Martinu - pretty much any of each of the 6 symphonies, let's say maybe 3 + 6
      Nielsen - ditto, but make the arbitrary choices 4 + 5
      Milhaud - La Création du Monde
      Janacek - Sinfonietta, and the suite from From The House of the Dead (had the overture to this in my head when I've woken up for the last few weeks or so, worrying stuff. Maybe chuck in a few other opera suites too - and while we're at it, Rimsky-Korsakov's suites-from-the-operas were mostly 20th century as well, whack 'em all in).
      Mahler - Symphony 8
      Kamran Ince - Symphony 2 "Fall of Constantinople"
      Avshalomoff - Flute Concerto
      Carlos Chávez - Symphony 4
      Revueltas - Le Noche de los Mayas
      Barber - Adagio for Strings
      Ruth Gipps - Symphony 2
      Britten - Sinfonia da Requiem
      Turnage - Drowned Out
      Adès - Asyla
      Prokofiev - Scythian Suite
      Shostakovich - Symphony 5 and maybe a few others - 10 and 13, I guess
      Pärt - Spiegel im Spiegel, Für Alina

      Also would have from that article Schoenberg's 5 pieces, Webern's 6 pieces, Music for 18 Musicians, the Quartet for the End of Time, and the Rite.

      Sean, you can close DiS now, you're not gonna get a better list of music.

      No replies.

    • Sibelius has never been taken massively seriously as a modern composer

      He's seen as too reliant on tonality, and not radical enough in many ways (despite being quite innovative in his use of structure and motivic development). He doesn't sound progressive enough, basically, due to the similarities between his style and the late 19th century school of composition.

      So whenever there are big discussions on 20th century music, he's often overlooked, especially due to his large period of inactivity after the late 1920s.

      • I think that depends massively on who's having the discussions

        I agree he can be overlooked, but at the same time if you drew up a list of the top half-dozen or so 20th century composers with the highest profile, he'd be right in there with Debussy, Rachmaninov, Stravinsky, Shostakovich, etc.

        I'd also argue that, while he obviously straddled the turn of the century, a larger part of why he doesn't sound "progressive enough" is due to the following century or so of music inspired by him.

        • Well it was academics and critics during his lifetime who called him unprogressive

          It's mainly after WWII that he's been seen as pushing boundaries, in far more subtle ways than his contemporaries, and admired for this.

          But yes, he's popular and rightly so. I suppose with Sibelius and Rachmaninov, because they're so intrinsically linked with late-romantic music, they're very well engrained in the symphony orchestra's repertoire. And because of this, the general audiences for these types of concerts don't necessarily equate either composer with the 20th century, it's often forgotten due to their musical language.

  • Don't know about my favourite

    But a piece I've been enjoying greatly recently is La Monte Young's 'The Well-Tuned Piano'. It's stupidly rare to get hold of a physical copy, but this podcast is a full recording of one of his performances:

    http://radiovalencia.fm/nosuchprogram/2012/05/10/no-such-program-2-8-1-the-well-tuned-piano-10-may-2012/

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