Stravinsky: Essential Works for Beginners

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  • Опубліковано 30 січ 2025

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  • @georgeknowles6806
    @georgeknowles6806 Рік тому +18

    A work that has a great story and enjoyable is the rarely mentioned The Soldiers Tale

    • @dennischiapello3879
      @dennischiapello3879 Рік тому +4

      The music is irresistible. The instrumentation is pure delight.

    • @eliasmodernell3348
      @eliasmodernell3348 Рік тому

      Roger Waters recorded a narrated English version. I guess as a tribute his dad

    • @robkeeleycomposer
      @robkeeleycomposer Рік тому +2

      Not to mention 'Renard'!

    • @murraylow4523
      @murraylow4523 Рік тому +3

      Thanks George. Yes, it’s one of his very greatest works, and one of the most original and enjoyable. Just because it’s so stripped down because of wartime circumstances, and tuneful, doesn’t make it any less important than some of his other marvellous things. Maybe the full version with all the talking won’t be something you want to listen to weekly (I think for anglophones the version with Boston Chamber Players, John Gielgud, Ron Moody, Tom Courtenay is very much the best). The suite is just marvellous and would give anyone the idea, and the percussion at the end foreshadows so many other things. It’s amazing how challenging circumstances can sometimes create a great innovation :)

    • @evaneldridge6056
      @evaneldridge6056 Рік тому +3

      I directed and staged a production of Soldiers Tale last semester and it is some of the most incredible music and such a great morality play. The recording with Jeremy Irons narrating is just incredible too, he does such a good job, and the Columbia Chamber Ensemble sounds great too.

  • @pederdunhage3619
    @pederdunhage3619 Рік тому +5

    Stravinsky have been one of my favorite composers for many years. I was hooked on his music after hearing Tilson Thomas and the Boston Symphony's excellent recording of the Rite of Spring. Soon I also discovered some of Stravinsky's neoclassical works like Pulcinella, Orpheus and Apollon and was equally fascinated by those. Later on Stravinsky faced serious competion when other interesting modern composers like Bartok, Debussy and Ravel caught my attention, but I regularly return to the essental works of Stravinsky.
    This new series of talks by mr. Hurwitz promises to be a very useful one indeed for all of us who need help finding our way in the wonderful world of classical music.

  • @johnandrewwindham6084
    @johnandrewwindham6084 Рік тому +3

    Glad to see Orpheus here.

  • @charlieclark983
    @charlieclark983 Рік тому +7

    Thank you for this lovely synopsis. It is especially nice to hear you mention Orpheus, a great score and an unforgettable Balanchine ballet. So deeply moving.

    • @robkeeleycomposer
      @robkeeleycomposer Рік тому +2

      'Orpheus' is sublime. Stravinsky at his most lyrical and vulnerable.

    • @dennischiapello3879
      @dennischiapello3879 Рік тому +1

      I've envy your having seen the ballet. I've never had the opportunity. Did you see it at NYCB?

    • @charlieclark983
      @charlieclark983 Рік тому

      Yes, I've seen it several times since the NYCB revived it in the mid 1990s; they pair it with Apollo and Agon.@@dennischiapello3879

    • @thomasdeansfineart149
      @thomasdeansfineart149 Рік тому +1

      @@dennischiapello3879 I saw both Apollo and Orpheus many times at NYC Ballet. Not only the deathless choreographic conceptions of George Balanchine, the sets of Orpheus were created by the great Isamu Noguchi. A real collaboration of genius. And I was lucky to see these ballets with some of Balanchine's greatest dancers. These occasions leave a lifetime of memories.

  • @anthonycook6213
    @anthonycook6213 Рік тому +1

    When I was in high school (1973) I rode my bicycle by a college dorm when a flood of music blasted from within. I knew it had to be Stravinsky, but it was incredibly powerful but unfamiliar and I felt helpless at not knowing what it was. I banged on the door, and a group of students invited me in to join them in listening repeatedly to the Symphonies of Wind Instruments. It was the climactic brass section that I had heard. Also, Requiem Canticles has been making the rounds on UA-cam Shorts recently, as someone pointed out that the terminally ill Robert Oppenheimer called Stravinsky as soon as he heard a recording of it in 1966, and requested permission for it to be played at his own funeral, which occurred 7 months later. Thank you David for the wonderful list of essentials, and as Leonard Bernstein pointed out in his lecture series in connection with The Soldier's Tale, there are always more absolutely must-hear Stravinsky compositions.

  • @bbailey7818
    @bbailey7818 Рік тому +7

    Not essential really, but I'd like to put in a word for Jeu de Cartes. It doesn’t get programmed often enough. It's light Stravinsky, sure, (a card game in three deals) but a lot of fun, even quoting Rossini, a perfect bit of Igorian champagne sec. Try it for a New Year's Eve classical program.

  • @fortunatomartino8549
    @fortunatomartino8549 Рік тому +2

    Great suggestions
    Thanks!

  • @jackdolphy8965
    @jackdolphy8965 Рік тому +6

    Fabulous list Dave. Of course starting with the Rite and last Les Noces. “I’m sure” you considered Symphonies of Wind Instruments… the orchestration is pinnacle Igor and the chorale at the end is as poignant as he ever got. Would love an installment of his ‘middle period’ chamber stuff, including the Symphonies of Winds.

    • @thomasdeansfineart149
      @thomasdeansfineart149 Рік тому +3

      Symphonies of Wind Instruments is sui generis in IMHO. No other composer of the time could have even conceived of such a unique work. Stravinsky's "vertical ear" was never clearer than this work. One of the greatest "ears" in Western Music. And the final chorale comprises one of his "eternal" endings. It is a work that rewards the time spent on it. There was once a wonderful Dutch documentary on the Symphonies on UA-cam. It is a profoundly moving work. I would also recommend the Mass--the Agnus Dei (last movement) is as poignant and restrained as Symphonies. But everything he wrote is incredibly rewarding IMHO.

  • @madrigal1956
    @madrigal1956 Рік тому +2

    As a huge fan of Stravinsky, I enjoyed very much this video (great comments on Oedipus Rex and Les Noces!). Well of course I would not have chosen necessarily the same ones, or rather I would have added certainly L'Histoire du Soldat (I just attended a live performance, it's decidedly irresistible), and one of the concertos (violin? piano? capriccio?). But then... It's all the better that way. I have not been listening to Orpheus for aeons, I'll do that!

  • @aarong5716
    @aarong5716 Рік тому +1

    Thanks, I look forward to checking these out! In the past, I've listened to a whole bunch of Stravinsky's Neo-Classical works with only limited success, but surprisingly "Symphony of Psalms" is the only 1/5 on this list I've tried.

    • @aarong5716
      @aarong5716 Рік тому +1

      @@maxhirsch7035 Thanks! Yes, so far Dunbarton Oaks and the Violin Concerto are his two Neo-Classical works I've enjoyed most.
      Of the works Dave mentioned, I was listening to Les Noces earlier on, and I like it a lot (it's kind of hilarious, actually), though I'm realizing it's closer to his early ballets than the Neo-Classical stuff.

  • @GG-cu9pg
    @GG-cu9pg Рік тому +2

    Hi Dave. Would love a talk on Stravinsky’s rhythmic innovations. Perhaps with your experience as a percussionist in his works works thrown in. Examples (if you are inclined) courtesy of Robert Craft?

  • @timyork6150
    @timyork6150 Рік тому

    This is about the best appreciation of Stravinsky's musical phases which I have ever heard or read. I have had the 21 CD Stravinsky/Stravinsky box for some years but I doubt if I have listened to everything in it, especially the vocal music because of lack of texts (rant!). It looks as if I should deepen my knowledge of Orpheus and Les Noces before venturing back into the more sacred works. Thanks, Dave.

  • @thomasdeansfineart149
    @thomasdeansfineart149 Рік тому +6

    enigmatic chord of Requiem Canticles. There is so much to discover in his music-what I used to describe as “a reason to live.” I can sit dry-eyed through Puccini and yet feel on the verge of tears during the somehow wistful tiny interludes in the finale of Pulcinella. Each to his/her/their own, I suppose. Thanks again for your great introductions.

    • @Warp75
      @Warp75 Рік тому +1

      I get a massive buzz out of some of Stravinsky’s works & feel absolutely nothing listening to Puccini. Each to their own for sure.

  • @williamwhittle216
    @williamwhittle216 Рік тому +1

    Have never been drawn to the vocal works, but the others are ingrained in my system.

    • @madrigal1956
      @madrigal1956 Рік тому

      I certainly can understand that but by all means, I can only concur with Mr Hurwitz : do perseverate with Oedipus Rex and Les Noces ; masterpieces!

  • @RyanRenteria
    @RyanRenteria 11 місяців тому

    les noces is really an amazing piece.

  • @Brandon55638
    @Brandon55638 Рік тому

    I first discovered Stravinsky when I was a teenager. I was really into his harmonically adventurous music (like The Rite of Spring). I recently found out that he generated his chords from a pair of fifths rather than two different keys stacked on top of each other. There are places where you find conventional triads and polytonality, but that is just a small part of the harmonic variety that Stravinsky created.

  • @dsammut8831
    @dsammut8831 Рік тому +1

    Marvellous Talk; thought you'd turned into Bernstein!

  • @GG-cu9pg
    @GG-cu9pg Рік тому +3

    In the corresponding Bartok video, you mention Bartok went through a dip in popularity as often happens to hugely respected composers after their death. Stravinsky seems to be bulletproof though. Perhaps most impressively, his great works are ballet, something many critics don’t take seriously (Poor Tchaikovsky, although Stravinsky clearly loved him) and yet he is taken with a reverence by the majority akin to Bach or Haydn. I speculate that in addition to his influence, it’s the highly public breakthroughs/riots accompanying his work and his urbane, cosmopolitan image that add to the mythos. And yes, he was funny too.

    • @PastPerspectives11
      @PastPerspectives11 2 місяці тому

      His music is undeniable. It has an immense, timeless, and foreboding Lovecraftian essence.

  • @samlaser1975
    @samlaser1975 Рік тому +1

    Perhaps the Hurwitz magic (unless already given) on "Works Of Igor Stravinsky as part of your series The Most Important Recording Projects EVAH!! Admittedly you won't find all the recordings in that set as good as many later recordings under different conductors, but I find this set fascinating and educational as well-at least as examples of Stravinsky music played as Starvinsky wanted.

  • @davidmayhew8083
    @davidmayhew8083 5 місяців тому

    I might be wrong, but aside from just a passing mention, have you ever talked about his "Symphony in Three Movements"?

  • @dmntuba
    @dmntuba Рік тому +1

    As much as I love The Firebird I do agree with you on Petrushka...it has a major Tuba solo ♥️👍

  • @dennischiapello3879
    @dennischiapello3879 Рік тому +2

    I'm a Stravinsky-lover, but Oedipus Rex has been a tough nut to crack. Your words about it will be helpful for my next attempts.
    It has always frustrated me that Apollo seems to outstrip Orpheus in popularity--on recordings and on the ballet stage (for understandable practical reasons.) But for me, Orpheus is far more rewarding, musically--more colorful, varied, and emotionally affecting (with Stravinsky, you gotta grab that when you can!)

    • @DavesClassicalGuide
      @DavesClassicalGuide  Рік тому +8

      It was for me too. Oedipus is kind of a whiny character, and it only really hit me when I started with Act II--the entrance of Jocasta. Her gorgeously sexy aria (a perfect baroque da capo) and then the ensuing loony duet just floored me. And from their the action is non-stop and very swift.

  • @robkeeleycomposer
    @robkeeleycomposer Рік тому +5

    Wot, no 'Circus Polka?, As Elgar's 'March of the Mogul Emperors' is his greatest work?? You gotta have elephants! 🙂 And for the late period, is there anything more delicious and seductive than 'Agon.?

    • @anthonycook6213
      @anthonycook6213 Рік тому +2

      Don't forget the roosters and foxes, cats and goats of Renard!

    • @thomasdeansfineart149
      @thomasdeansfineart149 Рік тому

      @@anthonycook6213 Renard is another of his mini-masterpieces for small ensembles and singers. Utterly transfixing onstage.

    • @thomasdeansfineart149
      @thomasdeansfineart149 Рік тому +1

      Also "Scherzo a la Russe," another pocket-masterpiece.

  • @captainhaddock6435
    @captainhaddock6435 Рік тому +2

    Looking forward to "Boulez: Essential Works for Beginners"
    Just kidding. Would make for a fun April fool's video though

    • @murraylow4523
      @murraylow4523 Рік тому +2

      Sigh.
      Well that might be something like
      Le marteau sans maître (a work Stravinsky admired, incidentally)
      Rituel in memoriam Bruno Maderna (even Dave likes this)
      Sur incises
      And maybe Anthemes 2 for violin/ electronics
      Maybe April would be a good time to discuss ;-)

    • @georgesdelatour
      @georgesdelatour Рік тому

      @@murraylow4523 My favourite Boulez work is Eclat.

    • @sbor2020
      @sbor2020 Рік тому +2

      Nothing foolish about _Rituel: In memoriam Bruno Maderna_ - a fabulous work, as is _Le Marteau sans maître_ ; you could even throw in the Piano Sonata No. 2.

    • @murraylow4523
      @murraylow4523 Рік тому

      Indeed. I’m not personally keen on the piano sonatas, but on the other hand, he wrote interesting music with a cool sense of timbre. Maybe I’m wrong but I think a lot of dismissal of Boulez results from not wanting to listen, or learn, so we are just rude about it instead @@sbor2020

    • @dennischiapello3879
      @dennischiapello3879 Рік тому +1

      @@sbor2020 Dave has given a thumbs up to Rituel. I'm all in with Marteau and the Piano Sonata No.2.

  • @JarrettWalksOttawa
    @JarrettWalksOttawa Рік тому

    Well guess I'll forget about being an Insider if I can't even get an email reply.

    • @bumblesby
      @bumblesby Рік тому

      Interesting. I have emailed ClassicsToday a few times and have always received a reply. Just wanted to let people know it is not the norm.