When asked what his opinion was about Bruckner, he just answered: that poor madman.
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Brahms' opinion on Bruckner.
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It's true that Brahms had little sympathy for Bruckner's music but you have to put this into the context of the time with two bitterly opposing schools of thought, the New music and the Conservatives. Here are two examples from both camps that show just how bitter this feud was.
Hugo Wolf, Salonblatt, Vienna, March 23, 1884.
The second number was Brahms’ Piano Concerto in B-flat major, played by the composer himself. Whoever can swallow this concerto with appetite can calmly await a famine; it is to be assumed that he enjoys an enviable digestion, and in time of famine will be able to get along sp end idly on the nutritive equivalent of window glass, cork stoppers, stove pipes, and the like.
Gustav Dömke, Wiener Allgemeine Zeitung,March 22, 1886
We recoil in horror before this rotting odor, which rushes into out nostrils from the disharmonies of this putrefactive counterpoint. His imagination is so incurably sick and warped that anything like regularity in chord progressions and period structure simply do not exist for him. Bruckner composes like a drunkard!
Brahms was caught up in the middle of this and he actually bore no personal ill will towards Bruckner as he attended his funeral.'Man know thyself'
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Jan Swafford’s excellent “Johannes Brahms; A Biography” says this, quoted in a letter to a man named Lisl:
“You have sat through the roaring of Bruckner’s symphony once, and now, when people talk about it, you are afraid to trust the recollection of your own senses. Well, you may safely do that. Your delightful letter expresses most lucidly all that can be said...He is a poor crazy person whom the priests of St. Florian have on their consciences (he is hinting of sexual abuse). You will not mind when I tell you that Hanslick shares your opinion, and read your letter with pious joy!
With supreme ill-humour, deepest respect and kindest regards, yours J. Br.”
Swafford goes on to write, “At concerts in the Musikverein Brahms sat in the Gesellschaft director’s box while Bruckner could only afford standing room in the back, with his students. When the two passed in the halls of the Musikverein, Bruckner bowed and scraped as Doktor Brahms swept past with a curt nod”(p.499). And:
“As always, Brahms could have forgiven a rival if he had been able to find any admiration for the music. He owned and studied some of Bruckner’s scores, but they only confirmed his enmity. To Brahms, Hanslick and most of their circle the scope and ambition of those symphonies were unwarranted, the occasional worthwhile ideas lost in a meandering maze....At one point Brahms expressed his objections in these terms, ‘Everything is affectation with him, nothing natural. But this thrashing around is disgusting to me; completely repugnant. He has no conception of a musical logic, no idea of an orderly musical structure’. If Wagner strung his operas together in loose quasi-symphonic form, that approach at least was relegated to the dramatic stage and its traditions. Bruckner appeared to bring the same cavalier approach to the genre of the symphony, intoxicating the public with brassy perorations and soaring themes without making any demands on their intelligence, their understanding of formal conventions. In other words, to Brahms and his followers Bruckner pandered to a public in some degree corrupted by Wagner, who wanted only to plunge into a voluptuous bath of sound and emotion”(p500).
And the final vicious salvo from Brahms, “Bruckner? That’s a swindle that will be forgotten a year or two after my death. Take it as you will, Bruckner owes his fame entirely to me, and but for me nobody would have cared a brass farthing for him”(501).
‘Hansi’ also hated the music of Liszt, despite that composers kindness towards both Brahms and Clara Schumann. But I agree entirely with what Brahms says about Bruckner’s symphonies!!!
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Originally posted by Humoresque View Post‘Hansi’ also hated the music of Liszt, despite that composers kindness towards both Brahms and Clara Schumann. But I agree entirely with what Brahms says about Bruckner’s symphonies!!!
"Brahms is a celebrity; I'm a nobody. And yet, without false modesty, I tell you that I consider myself superior to Brahms. So what would I say to him? If I'm an honest and truthful person, then I would have to tell him this: 'Herr Brahms! I consider you to be a very untalented person, full of pretensions but utterly devoid of creative inspiration. I rate you very poorly and indeed I simply look down upon you. But I need your services, and that's why I've come to you.' If, on the other hand, I'm dishonest and mendacious, then I would tell him quite the opposite. I can do neither the one nor the other."'Man know thyself'
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History is on the side of Brahms, much the superior of both composers IMO. He was across all the genres (except opera) and he didn't wear his heart on his sleeve as Tchaikovksy did. And Brahms contained his symphonic ideas in a tight structure much as Shakespeare did with his words in rigorous 14 line sonnets. When I listen to Brahms' symphonies I feel that he is controlling a volcano which, at any moment, is due to erupt.
As you say, "personal choice".
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Originally posted by Humoresque View PostAnd Brahms contained his symphonic ideas in a tight structure much as Shakespeare did with his words in rigorous 14 line sonnets.
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Carlos Kleiber felt the same way about Brahms as I do, as demonstrated particularly from 7:55 in this clip from 1991 with the Vienna Philharmonic:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XHmkl7GM_es
I love form and structure and adore this music: a tiny little musical lithium battery full of extraordinary energy and power which packs a delicate wallop:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oU0Ubs2KYUI
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Originally posted by Humoresque View PostHistory is on the side of Brahms, much the superior of both composers IMO. He was across all the genres (except opera) and he didn't wear his heart on his sleeve as Tchaikovksy did. And Brahms contained his symphonic ideas in a tight structure much as Shakespeare did with his words in rigorous 14 line sonnets. When I listen to Brahms' symphonies I feel that he is controlling a volcano which, at any moment, is due to erupt.
As you say, "personal choice".
Also, in a formal sense, Bruckner is much closer to Brahms than Liszt or Wagner.
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Originally posted by Sorrano View PostInterestingly enough, it seems to me that the camp of Liszt/Wagner/Bruckner was the inspiration from which the music of Debussy, Schoenberg, and others sprung from.
Also, in a formal sense, Bruckner is much closer to Brahms than Liszt or Wagner.
https://friedfoo.wordpress.com/music...e-progressive/'Man know thyself'
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This essay may be of interest with respect to Schoenberg's "Brahms the Progressive". Its author is a composer who lives in the Netherlands:
http://johnborstlap.com/brahms-the-progressive/
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Originally posted by Enrique View PostWhen asked what his opinion was about Bruckner, he just answered: that poor madman.
It's always interesting (and usually amusing) to read what composers think of their confrères (consider what Boulez thought about Shostakovich: "Well, Shostakovich plays with clichés most of the time, I find. It's like olive oil, when you have a second and even third pressing, and I think of Shostakovich as the second, or even third, pressing of Mahler.")
A propos Boulez, he seems to have had a fairly high regard for Bruckner and Mahler, though I can't remember him being a Brahms fan.
Personally, I'm very fond of both Bruckner and Brahms.
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As to Brahms "not wearing his heart on his sleeve", consider his Double Concerto for Violin and Cello, where the opening passage strikes me as an outpouring (a veritable flood) of repressed angst as the soloists strain and struggle with late Romantic string figurations. Pass me my hankerchief...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GMurNzAAcLALast edited by Quijote; 08-30-2017, 10:32 PM.
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Originally posted by Quijote View PostAs to Brahms "not wearing his heart on his sleeve", consider his Double Concerto for Violin and Cello, where the opening passage strikes me as an outpouring (a veritable flood) of repressed angst as the soloists strain and struggle with late Romantic string figurations. Pass me my hankerchief...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GMurNzAAcLA'Man know thyself'
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Here's a quote from Boulez concerning Brahms, by way of Schumann, Chopin and Wagner:
[ . . . ] Schumann, by comparison, shows little invention, and even little skill, especially in the longer works. His Scenes from Faust spring to mind, in which one sometimes wishes for greater color. Put simply, there are composers who possess this gift of instrumental invention and others who, more or less, lack it. Chopin was not interested in the orchestra; Brahms was much more astute in this respect than Schumann. Yet, if you compare the symphonies of Brahms to the operas of Wagner solely from the viewpoint of instrumentation, it is clear that Brahms followed Classical models very precisely and very well in a way that corresponds to his musical thoughts - but one is not bowled over by his instrumental imagination per se.
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