Friday, January 31, 2020

Making Distortions More Accessible

I sometimes ask myself if I am being paranoid. And then I ask myself if I am being paranoid enough? Perhaps there really is an overarching strategy to turn us all into uninformed, ignorant patsies, easy to push around. But never mind that, let's talk about Tchaikovsky. I just read an excellent article in a Canadian newspaper about an upcoming concert of the "Pathétique" Symphony by Tchaikovsky:  Tchaikovsky concert opens door to fact, fiction. The writer, Kevin Bazzana, is actually a trained musicologist so he has a lot to say about the presentation, one of a series called "Naked Classics."
The Pathétique, premièred in Saint Petersburg barely a week before Tchaikovsky’s death there at age 53, belongs on even the most selective list of greatest and most fascinating symphonies. Still, when I heard that Naked Classics was taking up this particular piece, my first thought was: “Uh-oh …”
Why? Because Tchaikovsky studies have become a poisoned well, rife with errors, prejudices, rumours, and conspiracy theories, which have been foisted onto a trusting public by commentators incapable of assessing the scholarly record.
You’ve probably heard that Tchaikovsky was tormented by his homosexuality and lived in a state of self-loathing celibacy. You’ve probably heard that he committed suicide, either on his own initiative or on orders from “above.” You’ve probably heard that the Pathétique, with its slow, bleak finale, was a “homosexual tragedy” that expressed his depression and was effectively his suicide note.
It’s all rubbish. So, by all means, go this weekend and enjoy one of the glories of the orchestral literature. But if presented, beforehand, with a salad of nonsense about the composer and his death, just clap politely and ignore it.
Read the whole thing. The imposed fictional narrative, fits well with the general project of turning everything into progressive victimology.

One of the reasons that I resist the various strategies to make classical music more "accessible" is that it usually opens the door to disinformation that always, conveniently, furthers the incremental progressive project. Take the trend towards having performers give a little chat before each piece. This is the perfect place to insert little political messages. Which is exactly why, in the traditional concert format, performers were silent and we relied on a printed program to give us the necessary information.

Let's give a listen to the Tchaikovsky, without commentary! This is Lionel Bringuier conducting the Frankfurt Radio Orchestra:


4 comments:

David said...

Bryan, thanks for sharing this. The PIT death fictions get too much air play (or "ink play" or "blog play"). It is encouraging to read the "no guff" article. Too bad the introductory analysis likely won't skewer the mis-information.

As I see it (and hear it), Tchaikovsky 6 is an unquestionably great work, without the noise of any back story.

Bryan Townsend said...

As I see it, Kevin Bazzana and Arthur Kaptainis (in Montreal) are the only writers on music in Canada that have the knowledge and will to set the record straight on things like this. We could use a few more!

David said...

Bryan, just to cap off the thoughts in these comments and your post, I came across this analysis by Tom Service in The Guardian:

https://www.theguardian.com/music/tomserviceblog/2014/aug/26/symphony-guide-tchaikovsky-sixth-pathetique-tom-service

You will see that Service plays down the whole "Composer Knew He Was Dying" angle.

Bryan Townsend said...

Yes, Tom Service did a lot of good music journalism with that project. Sadly, the new management at The Guardian has de-emphasized that kind of thing.