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OPINION OR FACT?

Dr David C F Wright

 

I recently heard a BBC announcer refer to Holst as a great composer and that The Planets Suite was a masterpiece.

Is either statement true?

The fact that the statement has been made will mean that some people will believe it.

Let me make it clear that I have no axe to grind about Holst. I neither like nor dislike his music. I am merely using this statement as an example to lead us to consider the difficult subject of what is opinion and what is fact.

May I also make it clear that the purpose of this essay is not to offend in any way whatsoever or be bellicose but to cause healthy consideration and discussion.

St Paul's Cathedral in London is a marvellous architectural achievement. That is a fact, but my opinion is that it is an ugly building. Thus opinion and fact are distinguished.

Salisbury Cathedral is an even more amazing achievement particularly when you consider when it was constructed . It is a great building. That is a fact whether I like it or not and I have to say that while I admire the skill in its manufacture I do not care for it and I am happier in a little Welsh chapel.

The Forth Bridge in Scotland is a fine piece of engineering. It is a great achievement but many do not like it and they are entitled to that opinion but the fact remains.

The paintings of Velasquez are full of skill, excellent craftsmanship and design. There is no doubt that he is a great painter and artist but, sadly, there are those who do not respond to his work. If someone were to say, I do not like his paintings, that is an opinion but the fact is that they are great paintings because of the tremendous skill of the artist in producing them.

By contrast, here is an artist, so-called, who pours yellow paint on a canvas and rides his bicycle through it and so you have one bicycle track across yellow. That is not a great painting. It has no skill in its production and yet the man who did it gets a handsome cash reward for this work of art.

We often try to elevate our opinions into facts.

I saw a pleasant painting recently of a simple scene where the use of colour was very telling. Later I discovered it was a painting by numbers work where the drawing was supplied as were the colours and each section had a number showing what paint to use. The painter followed the instructions and took his time and was careful but it had little skill and was 'textbook stuff' '. There is no way you can call that painter a great artist or his work a masterpiece but I liked it.

That we like something does not mean that it is good or a masterpiece.

There is in music the equivalent of painting by numbers. A so-called composer can copy the style of an existing work and follow harmonic patterns and 'play safe' and, in so doing, produce a competent work even if it is not original in the correct or any other sense of that word. You can take a musical textbook and compose a piece following all the guidelines and, again, produce a competent piece. But that does not make you a great composer or your work a masterpiece.

In any event the first essential ingredient to justify any composer being great is that his music is original and not a copy , parody or pastiche. I heard a great conductor say that any work which consists of a set of variations on a theme of someone else cannot by definition be a great work in itself.

But that is another matter.

I suppose the term is music modelling. On a more advanced scale one can say that to some extent Grieg modelled his Piano Concerto on that of Schumann. The difference here is that Grieg used some personal skills as well and I think his concerto may be preferable to Schumann's. Perhaps this is due to a more imaginative orchestration.

A composer who relied on the ‘painting by numbers’ scheme was Schubert. He looked at the scores of other composers and wrote down in his notebooks from their examples how to cope with technicalities in music such as, for example, modulation. Therefore he saw how Telemann once made an effortless modulation from C major to F minor and copied it note for note and whenever Schubert wrote such a modulation it was always the same with no acknowledgement to Telemann. Such predictability in music often shows a lack of skill, competence and imagination. The other problem with Schubert is that chunks of his works are by other composers with perhaps one slight alteration. He is a real ‘painting by numbers’ composer and therefore is not a great composer.

I discussed this with the late Roger Fiske and supplied him with evidence which he examined for himself and found that what I said was right. In his Eulenberg score of Schubert's Symphony no 6 he quotes the results of my research which he verified.

In the opening movement of this Symphony four bars are clearly 'lifted' from Beethoven's Prometheus, bars 12 -15 are from Rossini's Overture La Gazza Ladra, bars 31 -38 are 'lifted' from Haydn Symphony no. 100, bars 77ff are from three works of Beethoven namely the second and fourth symphonies and the first Piano Concerto, Bars 134ff are from Beethoven's Symphony no. 1 and from 349ff there is Beethoven's Leonora Overture no.3. The slow movement is 'lifted' from Rossini's Barber of Seville and the third movement is a combination of four Beethoven works, the Moonlight Sonata, Symphony no. 1, Prometheus and Egmont. The finale is a clear theft from Beethoven symphonies 1 and 7.

Schubert would have known these works and so these thefts cannot be called accidental. The lame excuse that all composers do this is not true and because there is no defence for Schubert's actions his devotees will accuse me of rubbishing him.

I could give examples of many other works of Schubert which will prove the same points. Therefore it is a fact that Schubert was and is not a great composer.

These thefts still happen today. To quote one obvious example Britten's Violin Concerto uses 'stolen property' upon which Britten has put his name. An American conductor said of his Britten, "He rustles cattle and put his brand over the brand of the legitimate owner." As someone commented, the best part of this concerto was written by Prokofiev and there is no doubt that the final pages come directly from Constant Lambert's Rio Grande. Therefore, there is no way that this work can be called great or a masterpiece.

The same principle exists in writing. I have written articles, some of which are on this website, which have been copied and the new 'author' has put his name to it. In the process he may have changed two words or removed a paragraph but the work is not his. It is plagiarism; it is deception; it is a breach of copyright; it is illegal. It is interesting to note that the word ‘plagiarism’ comes from the Latin which means 'to kidnap'.

Copyright exists on all written work even if it is unpublished. copyright is an automatic right and it gives the author exclusive rights over his work. Only he has the right to allow it to be copied, quoted, used or stored in any library or retrieval system. Only he has the right for it to be downloaded. Each essay, dissertation and thesis submitted to any university or seminary is copyright. Every review of a CD is copyright. The only requirement is that the work is in a permanent form ... on paper, on a floppy disc or hard drive, on audio or video-cassette etc. This also applies to short extracts because often a main point is a brief and succinct one. The penalties for breach of copyright can be quite severe and may even include a prison sentence.

The word masterpiece is often misused. Originally it might be a work of outstanding originality, mastery and skill but that correct definition has been bastardised to mean a person's best work. If that second definition is correct and acceptable then it follows that a composer can only write one masterpiece. One cannot therefore say of a work, "This is one of several masterpieces by Mozart!"

If we are honest we will agree with Aaron Copland that while there is a lot of good music about there are very few masterpieces and therefore very few great composers.

If a masterpiece is the composer's best piece what is Mozart's masterpiece? What is Beethoven's masterpiece? And so the questions mount up!

I am very fond of the music of Telemann but is he a great composer? What work of his is his masterpiece? Can we list all his works that are outstanding, completely original, masterly and very skilful?

Can you have a flawed masterpiece?

Let us return to Holst's Planets Suite and I must remind you that I am neither for nor against Holst. There are serious orchestral flaws in the work which would equate with several spelling mistakes in a written text. Therefore, is The Planets a masterpiece?

It may be accepted that most composers have written works that are substandard or not as good as others. I have before me a song by Schubert in which the whole of the piano part consists of three chords, tonic, sub-dominant and dominant and it is boring. It is the sort of thing that pop groups do. There is no skill in that!

Here is a composer who marks a movement allegro. Allegro means quick, merry and lively. In the hands of a great composer like Haydn a movement marked allegro would have lots of quavers and semiquavers and would be merry, quick and lively and bounce along. But Elgar writes allegros and has semi-breves and dotted minims all over the place. Therefore the music is not really an allegro but an andante about half the pace of a Haydnesque allegro because Haydn uses very short notes and Elgar long ones. If a movement is allegro it must be quick, lively and merry but an andante is a walking pace. An allegro is a sprint not an amble. An allegro is athletic not a stroll. The wrong use of words devalues music and makes the user lose some credibility. An Elgar allegro is like a novel called ‘Murders at Hill House’ when the novel contains no murders and no location called Hill House.

Let us take the music of Johann Strauss the waltz king. While it is popular in some quarters and was written to accommodate a current trend in the snobby society of its day it is not great music. This composer never wrote a really great or original work although there are some moments to admire. No musician would call him a great composer or any of his works a masterpiece.

But snobbery works in reverse. The works of Jerome Kern are not regarded in some circles and dismissed by others are merely show songs and romantic trivia and lacking in class.

That is prejudice.

His songs are far far better than those of Schubert. Take , for example, The way you look tonight. The harmony is always changing, the accompaniment is imaginative and the melody is really sumptuous.

There are the comparatively unknown songs of Eric Coates which are superb little gems. His songs are vastly superior to Schubert's in that they are well written, with important piano parts and vocal lines full of interest and expression.

But I wonder if I can safely call Kern or Coates great composers.

The originality of Wagner makes him a great composer. He introduced real drama into music. His orchestration is truly superb but the old cliché raises its head namely that Wagner wrote marvellous moments but long half hours. One of his greatest skills was the use of stunningly original chromatic harmony.

However, there are people that hate Wagner and probably because he was not a pleasant man being racist and a political revolutionary . He was troublesome and arrogant and I, for one would not have liked him if I had met him particularly for his anti-semitism.

People are fickle in that they castigate Wagner for his immorality, life style and private life and yet will not apply the same principles to Schubert who misused women all his life and died of syphilis or apply the principles to assess Elgar who was a ruthless womaniser, stealing other men's wives as well as being bisexaul and a man of extreme arrogance. Then there is Mozart who wrote sexually perverse and grossly offensive songs with his own depraved words.

This raises the issue of morality in any composer or musician, a subject on which I have ventured before and received hostile criticism. The fact that a composer is a decent human being, such as Haydn or Bruckner is no guarantee that their music is decent and good, although I believe they are both very fine composers. The fact that a composer is a 'bad boy' and thoroughly despicable and immoral does not mean that their music is decadent or awful. I think of the Welsh composer Grace Williams and what an absolute nuisance she was at rehearsals tugging angrily at a conductor's tails and telling him it was 'all wrong' when it was not. She was an awful liability and yet some of her music is truly inspiring and of immense worth. How Arwel Hughes or Mansel Thomas put up with her I will never know!.

People become so agitated on these issues even to the point of being rudely aggressive, uttering slander and libel and resorting to terminating friendships and badmouthing those with whom they disagree.

There is a legitimate argument: Does it matter if a composer is great or not? Does it matter if a composer is called great when he isn't? Does it matter if Holst's Planets Suite is called a masterpiece and it isn't?

If an opinion is elevated to be a fact does it matter?

Is it not all down to that feeble expression: I know what I like and that's all that matters!

I hope not.

The same principles must be considered in performances and reviews of discs should note these principles.

Otto Klemperer was a great musician ... but a great conductor? I have him on disc conducting some Mozart symphonies. One particular movement is marked allegro molto, that is to say very quick and lively, and most conductors obey Mozart and this movement on all the recordings I have lasts about 3 minutes 55 seconds to 4 minutes and three seconds and all the repeats are observed. Klemperer takes five minute 19 seconds with exactly the same material and repeats. It is agony but this feature pervades most of his recordings.

Another conductor, whom I shall not mention, actually alters notes and the composer's orchestration and does not tell us so. He does it all the time and yet he is called a great conductor? Is he?

The facts are that Klemperer is too slow and the other bloke does not honour the composers he conducts but violates their wishes.

It raises another problem for you to consider.

Barbirolli was not a great conductor. Let me quote two examples to prove the point. He would enter into contracts to conduct certain concerts and repertoire which was notified to him in detail and in advance. But the difficult scores he was absolutely useless at and he would get George Weldon to conduct them after a couple of rehearsals where Barbirolli's incompetence revealed itself again. This happened constantly. He was put in a position once where he had to conduct a new British symphony and could not back out of this contract, and so what he did was make cuts in all the movements and these cuts were the bits he could not cope with. The performance went ahead with these cuts and the symphony was poorly received. Norman del Mar took the symphony up and performed it whole without the excisions and it was very well received. Barbirolli never acknowledged Del Mar again.

Does that tell us that Weldon and Del Mar were better conductors than Barbirolli or that they were better musicians, or both? What is the fact and what is the opinion?

I read a review of a disc in which the reviewer said that the performances complied with all the composer’s instructions. That reviewer did not have a clue. The performances left out the essential piano part which the composer never authorised but actually writes in the score that the piano part is essential.

It must be so that a work cannot be a masterpiece if its content is not in keeping with its theme or purpose. Let us take Britten's War Requiem. We all know what war is and what a requiem is. Much of this work is irrelevant and the final homosexual love-duet is really unsuitable for such a work.

As we said at the beginning this essay is not to anger or annoy but to cause us to consider the issues and be non-prejudicial and, hopefully, an honesty and musical integrity will take its proper place.

Copyright David Wright 2004

 

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