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Einar Englund - The Great Wall of China (1949) 

Bartje Bartmans
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Sven Einar Englund (June 17, 1916 - June 27, 1999) was a Finnish composer.
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Incidental music to the Great Wall of China (1949)
Play by Max Frisch (1911-1991)
1. L'Ouvertura. Allegretto ritmico (0:00)
2. Masquerade in a Chinese Garden. Allegretto (2:35)
3. Inquisition. Adagio (4:30)
4. Rumba. Vivace (8:07)
5. Green Table Tango. Allegretto moderato (10:11)
6. March à la Shostakovich. Vivo (11:52)
7. Jazz Intermezzo. Allegro moderato (13:58)
8. Finale-Polonaise. Alla polacca (16:22)
Tampere Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Eri Klas
Originally, Frisch’s surrealist play included incidental music composed by Einar Englund. Described as a composer of great versatility, Englund was a representative of the “Finnish lost generation,” young men sacrificing their youth in the war. He served in the Finnish army during its conflict with the Soviet Union, and survived as he later recalled “by a sheer miracle.” Sadly, a wound to his right hand sustained in this conflict prevented him from attaining a full career as a pianist, and he focused his energies on composition. Englund won a scholarship to study with Aaron Copland in 1949, with Copland declaring, “Well, there’s nothing I can teach you!” His incidental music for “The Great Wall of China” was also composed in 1949, originally for a theatre band of seven. He later arranged the music for full orchestra, and its eight movement mingle the musical influences of Prokofiev with popular musical styles, including a “Tango,” “Rumba,” and a “Jazz-Intermezzo.” The music, according to the composer, does not contribute to the satire of the theatrical play, but rather suggests, “that no wall is strong enough to keep out ideas and influences.”
Only months after the horrendous atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the Swiss playwright and novelist Max Frisch (1911-91) penned his theatrical play “The Chinese Wall.” It is in equal parts tragedy, comedy, history and satire that address the possibility of global extinction in the nuclear age.
Rejecting all manner of authoritarian rule, the “Chinese wall,” essentially a national obsession for almost two thousand years, comes to signify the futility of building barriers to keep influences and ideas at bay. The play takes place in the Emperor’s court in Nanking, but Frisch includes a number of historical and literary figures, including Cleopatra, Brutus, Pontius Pilate, Romeo and Juliet, Columbus, Philip II of Spain, Don Juan, and Napoleon. Frisch’s fundamental message appears to be that “it is impossible to solve the problems of the 20th century by using methods that became obsolete in the third century AD.”

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26 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 15   
@tommyron
@tommyron 5 дней назад
This composer was only a name to me until now. Is it all this good? The idea behind the play is fascinating and this music really delivers both on that level and definitely as a work on its own. I get the Prokofiev influence but I also get a strong DSCH Sym.9 vibe. The whole thing is fresh, inventive and beautifully scored. Thanks J-M!
@albertliu1068
@albertliu1068 12 дней назад
its great to listen and see the composition together in visual form - thank you !
@elmiramuradova561
@elmiramuradova561 19 дней назад
I would never have thought that music could be written about this... interesting idea...
@christophedevos3760
@christophedevos3760 3 дня назад
Very interesting, a whole lot of styles passing by indeed, with colorful orchestration. Regarding Max Frisch, an author I also should explore, didn't he write 'Homo Faber' by the way?
@TempodiPiano
@TempodiPiano 18 дней назад
so nice! sometimes amusing sometimes intriguing
@vicb4901
@vicb4901 18 дней назад
Twentieth century music can be broadly represented by jazz and/or Shostakovich. This very work, made in Englund, is a beautiful example of the black (in all its meanings and connotations) humor in musicality...
@ulisses_nicolau_barros
@ulisses_nicolau_barros 19 дней назад
Fascinanting!
@JanCarlComposer
@JanCarlComposer 15 дней назад
Cannot tell why, but I nearly fell asleep during this one.
@filmscorefreak
@filmscorefreak 19 дней назад
Took me a second to realize his use of Shostakovich 8th was meant to be obvious. I'm sure there's other pieces in there, like the Chopin in the end movement; and sounds like that German song Horst Vessel (sp?) in the march, don't know if Shos. used that himself. Good stuff!
@ImJumber
@ImJumber 19 дней назад
Doesn't sounds like "The Great Wall of China"
@elmiramuradova561
@elmiramuradova561 19 дней назад
Почему же? Представьте себе набеги врагов.... )
@bartjebartmans
@bartjebartmans 19 дней назад
Read the info under the video. It is satire.
@VanchaMarch2
@VanchaMarch2 19 дней назад
Doesn’t the composer specifically say that it’s not satire?
@bartjebartmans
@bartjebartmans 19 дней назад
It doesn't contribute to the satire of the play. Doesn't mean it is not satire as music by itself. If the March a la Shostakovich is not satire, I don't know what is.
@meisterwue
@meisterwue 17 дней назад
It sounds like ......hahaha.....
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