MiNe 109 wrote:
In article
om,
Jenn wrote:
In article ,
MiNe 109 wrote:
In article .com,
"John Atkinson" wrote:
Jenn wrote:
In article ,
(paul packer) wrote:
Britain's best 20th century composer was of course Vaughan
Williams.
I LOVE RVW, but I think of him as a 19th century composer, as
indicated by his harmonic language.
Yes. Not that there's anything wrong with that.
Same with Holst.
Well...
I think of the various folk music influences as 20th century.
Interesting! I think of them as decidedly 19th century! I'm
re-studying his Folk Song Suite now for performances in March, btw.
Such great songs: Seventeen Come Sunday, My Bonnie Boy, etc.
Tune w/new arrangement is probably as ancient as music itself! I'm
thinking more of the how folk modes show a way to escape the inevitable
ti-do of functional harmony. Collecting (and recording) folk tunes is
also very much a modern activity.
Indeed. Percy Grainger was probably the first to do both.
I finally learned the name of the 'other tune' from V-W's
"Greensleeves," "Lovely Joan."
It's a neat tune, isn't it?
BTW, and as you probably know, the final movement of the Holst F Suite
for Band was, AFAIK, the first appearance of Greensleeves in a
symphonic work, barely predating RVW's opera "Sir John in Love".