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Sat, 10 Jul 1999 10:48:15 -0400 |
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Thanks to Walter Meyer for his extensive quotes from Mann's Doktor Faustus,
a novel that every music lover should get acquainted with. (Although Mann
does irritate me somewhat by giving the impression that, in writing it, he
was feeling sorry for himself as a German more than feeling compassion for
the Nazis' victims.)
The description of Leverkuhn's "Faustus Cantata" that Walter quotes:
>This gigantic *lamento* (lasting approximately an hour and a quarter) is,
>properly speaking, undynamic, lacking development and without drama, in
>much the same way as when a stone is cast into water the concentric circles
>that spread farther and farther, one around the other, are without drama
>and always the same.
also reminds me of Gorecki/s Third. In this case, unlike Britten, mightn't
the composer have gotten some inspiration from Mann?
Jon Johanning // [log in to unmask]
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