Music composed before 1800 is rubbish? I couldn’t disagree more

What a sadly constricted view of the musical world my friend Simon Heffer reflects! In a column published in The Daily Telegraph on Saturday, he said he has no wish to hear any music written before 1800, so with a flick of his highly cultured hand he dismissed not only Bach and Mozart but also ignored all those who came before them, the composers who created the Western tradition that he values so highly. I don’t think Simon would dismiss the art and architecture of the past so lightly. 

It seems to me that Simon is stuck in a far-off past where progress was king. I read books that held this belief when I was a child, telling us that as music got louder, bigger, and faster our connection to the works of the past became more and more remote. Yet even then, singing the wonderful music of the 16th-century composer William Byrd in my church choir, I knew that was nonsense. This music spoke just as directly and powerfully to me as that of later centuries. And that instinct of deep connection with the past was a growing feeling. Simon’s god among 20th-century composers, Ralph Vaughan Williams, was eternally interested in old music, from folk songs to church music: he based his famous Fantasia on a theme by the English Renaissance composer Thomas Tallis. For him, great music grew from its past.  

There may well have been a time when those brought up on heavy, lugubrious performances of Bach might have found him tedious – Simon had one ally in the journalist Bernard Levin, who claimed that everything Bach wrote sounded as if it were written in the minor key. When Bach performances plodded dully, that was an understandable mistake. And, when Mozart was performed in a dainty and distant manner, and only programmed as a prelude to later, more weighty music, you could see why pianist Glenn Gould rejected the composer as superficial. 

But when you hear what Mozart made of the everyday form of the Divertimento, in his E flat Trio (peerlessly examined by Roger Parker in last week’s Building a Library on BBC Radio 3), or what Bach created from a common form of the day in his sublime Goldberg Variations, you realise that both these great composers transcend the often mundane circumstances for which their music was written. In this ability to speak across the centuries, Bach and Mozart are by any measure two of the greatest geniuses of the Western tradition.

Simon overlooks two critical things that have happened which have transformed the way we listen to music in recent years. The first is that a century of recording, broadcasting and now streaming services has made an infinite wealth of music immediately available to us, meaning we are no longer bound to feel that the music of today is more powerful than the music of many centuries ago. And there are wonderful discoveries to be made, if we allow ourselves to be surprised. I challenge Simon to remain unmoved by a great performance of, say, Purcell’s Dido and Aeneas with its searing culmination in Dido’s lament.

 

Related Posts

Property Management in Dubai: Effective Rental Strategies and Choosing a Management Company

“Property Management in Dubai: Effective Rental Strategies and Choosing a Management Company” In Dubai, one of the most dynamically developing regions in the world, the real estate…

In Poland, an 18-year-old Ukrainian ran away from the police and died in an accident, – media

The guy crashed into a roadside pole at high speed. In Poland, an 18-year-old Ukrainian ran away from the police and died in an accident / illustrative…

NATO saw no signs that the Russian Federation was planning an attack on one of the Alliance countries

Bauer recalled that according to Article 3 of the NATO treaty, every country must be able to defend itself. Rob Bauer commented on concerns that Russia is…

The Russian Federation has modernized the Kh-101 missile, doubling its warhead, analysts

The installation of an additional warhead in addition to the conventional high-explosive fragmentation one occurred due to a reduction in the size of the fuel tank. The…

Four people killed by storm in European holiday destinations

The deaths come amid warnings of high winds and rain thanks to Storm Nelson. Rescuers discovered bodies in two separate incidents / photo ua.depositphotos.com Four people, including…

Egg baba: a centuries-old recipe of 24 yolks for Catholic Easter

They like to put it in the Easter basket in Poland. However, many countries have their own variations of “bab”. The woman’s original recipe is associated with…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *