AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to over 30 million articles from top publications available through your library.

The Music of Harrison Birtwistle. (Twentieth-Century British Composers).

Notes

| March 01, 2002 | Williams, Alastair | COPYRIGHT 2002 Music Library Association, Inc. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

The Music of Harrison Birtwistle. By Robert Adlington. (Music in the Twentieth Century.) Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000. [xiv, 242 p. ISBN 0-521-63082-7. [pounds sterling]42.50.]

The sixty-fifth birthday of Harrison Birtwistle in 1999 prompted a rush of scholarly assessment which in addition to Adlington's contribution included books by Michael Hall (Harrison Birtwistle in Recent Years [London: Robson, 1998]) and Jonathan Cross (Harrison Birtwistle: Man, Mind, Music [London: Faber & Faber, 2000]). These publications are evidence of Birtwistle's status as Britain's most eminent living composer; a position that is confirmed by the commissions and performances he has received recently, and supported in an inverted fashion by the antimodernist protests that took place in the 1994 performances of Gawain, as well as by the hostile reaction to the premiere of Panic at the 1995 Last Night of the Proms. Reactions to Birtwistle range from the considered opinions of experts to the disparate, often hostile, views of the general public. The Music of Harrison Birtwistle will inevitably be of more interest to the former group than the latter, though it is not beyond the reach of an interested amate ur. More precisely, it is pitched at a level that will appeal to a student with some knowledge of modernism--and, perhaps, of a few scores by Birtwistle--while also offering perspectives of significance to those with a more expansive knowledge of this repertory.

Adlington's study is at once a handbook to Birtwistle's oeuvre and an attempt to understand it by means of the areas described in chapter headings such as "Theatres," "Times," and "Layers." He discusses all the scores published before the appearance of the book as well as some unpublished and withdrawn works. (The recent stage work The Last Supper is not included.) The clear advantages of this thematic approach are that, by and large, it avoids descriptions held together by a biographical thread and places well-known scores alongside lesser-known experiments; the disadvantages are that it sometimes splits discussion of scores between several sections (a problem partly alleviated by an index of works) and forces the reader interested in the chronology of Birtwistle's development to turn rather frequently to the list of scores provided. If the desire simultaneously to address important issues and to be inclusive inevitably creates a certain tension, it is one worth living with because the text undoubtedly prov ides a useful starting point for someone wishing to become acquainted with a particular score without sacrificing substantial discussion of important topics. In the latter capacity, Adlington is at his best in the opening "Theatres" chapter, when considering big ideas such as violence, myth, narrative, and ritual. Elsewhere, he provides stimulating discussions of temporality, especially with regard to The Triumph of Time, and of forms and roles when considering Secret Theatre, for example.

As these topics might suggest, the author is fully aware of the criticisms leveled at modernism, offering a fair-minded and considered response to such accusations. Indeed, his clearly stated aim of moving beyond technical detail to what he calls "hermeneutic criticism" (p. 1) is ...

Related articles from newspapers, magazines, journals, and more
Harrison Birtwistle.
Magazine article from: American Record Guide LEHMAN, MARK L January 1, 2001 700+ words
...paper This admirable study of Harrison Birtwistle--the "most original...take up different aspects of Birtwistle's background, models, aesthetic...goes into the actual making of Birtwistle's music. Illustrating his...
Birtwistle's brilliance.(Harrison Birtwistle's The Minotaur)(Opera review)
Magazine article from: Spectator Tanner, Michael April 26, 2008 700+ words
...first performance of a masterpiece. The Minotaur, so far as I can tell from one intense experience, has all of Harrison Birtwistle's strengths and none of his weaknesses. He likes to take on big themes, and that leads him to mythology, whether...
Birtwistle: Wind Music.
Magazine article from: American Record Guide Gimbel, Allen November 1, 2001 700+ words
BIRTWISTLE: Wind Music Galliard Ensemble; Richard...winds by the esteemed British composer Harrison Birtwistle. They are arranged in a truly random...here their context is pretty obscure. Birtwistle's latest take on this medium is Five...
Birtwistle's Last Supper: a new cuisine.
Magazine article from: American Record Guide Greenfield, Edward March 1, 2001 700+ words
...Who would have thought that Sir Harrison Birtwistle, most abrasive of British composers...the second of the operas that Birtwistle has written for the Glyndebourne...always a basic element with Birtwistle--centering on the assembly...
Birtwistle: Gawain.(Marie Angel, Francois Le Roux, John Tomlinson, Royal Opera)
Magazine article from: Opera News Smith, Patrick J. October 1, 1997 700+ words
Harrison Birtwistle's fifth stage work, the first he...placidity of Icing Arthur's Camelot. Birtwistle's librettist, David Harsent, tells...proceedings with unnecessary ballast, and Birtwistle's knotty, rumbustious music does...
Birtwistle: Gawain. (Royal Opera House; London, England)
Magazine article from: National Review Greer, Herb March 30, 1992 700+ words
...uncomfortable." The British composer Harrison Birtwistle betrayed just such a conscience...are not particularly obscure. Birtwistle employs various technical devices...and they claimed to be fans of Birtwistle's music) were looking furtively...
Birtwistle: The Woman and the Hare; Lorine Niedecker songs; Duets for Storab;...
Magazine article from: American Record Guide Gimbel, Allen January 1, 2003 700+ words
...minutes A miscellany of chamber and vocal works by Harrison Birtwistle. Earliest (and last on the program) is Entr...its greyness, dampness, and somber atmosphere. Birtwistle makes sly references to Carter in the cello's pizzicato...
Cleveland Orchestra: Birtwistle Night's Blackbird [premiere].(Lucerne)
Magazine article from: American Record Guide Littler, William January 1, 2005 700+ words
...independent mid-20th-Century generation of composers, Harrison Birtwistle has always insisted on playing by his own rules...string chord--but its characteristically (for Birtwistle) dense argument makes its brevity welcome to the...
Berlin Opera: Birtwistle The Last Supper [premiere].
Magazine article from: American Record Guide MOOR, PAUL July 1, 2000 700+ words
...Pears's Aldeburgh Festival unveiled Birtwistle's first opera, Punch and Judy, and...of Orpheus in 1986. A BBC interview Birtwistle happened to hear led to his choice of...lives in Victoria, British Columbia. Birtwistle himself has a fairly extensive American...
Birtwistle: Pulse Shadows. (Guide to Record).
Magazine article from: American Record Guide Gimbel, Allen March 1, 2002 700+ words
...sullen, mystical blank verse, set by Birtwistle in his suitably High Modernist, often...leftover Stravinskyism (see my review of Birtwistle's earlier wind works, N/D 2001...that prevents casual dismissal. Both Birtwistle and Celan demand careful study: such...
For more facts and information, see all results

Source: HighBeam Research, The Music of Harrison Birtwistle. (Twentieth-Century British...

©2009 Gale, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
About us | FAQs | Contact us | Privacy policy | Terms and conditions
Other Gale sites: Encyclopedia.com | HighBeam Research | Acquire Content | Books & Authors | Goliath | MovieRetriever | Smart QandA