http://i49.tinypic.com/1y71ck_th.jpgA good deal of what I have written here is related (sometimes only tangentially) to serious music. A few posts about interesting but not well-known musicians or composers are accompanied by live broadcast recordings, with download links in the comments. (If there is a problem with a link, or if you need to contact me for some other reason, you can email me at boomboomsky at gmail dot com. )
There are no commercial recordings on this blog.
A word of warning: Occasionally I use strong language in referring to various arrogant and incompetent assholes who managed to get on my nerves. Or simply because it gets a point across with greater directness and transparency. If you are squeamish about strong language, then stay away from this blog.

April 15, 2009

Prokofiev and Schoenberg




The curse of mental associations: When I listen to Prokofiev I always feel sorry for poor Schoenberg. Both were modernists who had scandal-causing premieres in their early days, both composed into the early 1950s (when they died within 2 years of each other), yet Prokofiev departed this world as a composer with a wide public following and many recordings of his works, while Schoenberg remained the rarely performed (and rarely recorded) Bogeyman of serious music long after this death.

It is tempting to try to explain this disparity (at least in part) by noting that Prokofiev, unlike Schoenberg, never abandoned tonality. But this explanation never made sense to me because tonal music can be far more jarringly dissonant and abrasive than atonal or serial music. I am still mildly startled by the Andante of Prokofiev's 3rd piano concerto, where the opening theme jumps from the initial orchestral statement in E minor to the piano restatement of that theme in B-flat major (without any wandering through intermediate keys) . The effect of this "wrong key" modulation still feels more jolting to my ears than any "wrong note" effect in Schoenberg's gentle, even wistful 12-tone piano concerto. Yet at the time when Prokofiev 3rd already had several recordings on major labels, the great Stokowski reportedly had to pay the soloist's fee to have the Schoenberg concerto performed with the NBC symphony (and, as a result, effectively put an end to his future appearances with the orchestra).

Poor Arnold ...