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Tuesday, April 01, 2014

Not Quite What Was Intended

In email received from San Francisco Symphony:


5 comments:

  1. On a related subject, does anyone else think it weird to call this piece the "Great Symphony"? For most of my lifetime, and for long before that, it was the "Great C Major" symphony, which distinguished it from Schubert's #6, the "Little C Major". The adjective "Great" referred primarily to its length and secondarily to its majesty. "Great Symphony" a la "New World Symphony" or "Sea Symphony" sounds pretentious and wrong. I think Schubert would be appalled.

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  2. I'm with you, Tod: it's nuts. I also believe "Great C Major" is to distinguish it from the "Little C Major."

    I did find that Schubert told someone in a letter that he was working on a "grosse sinfonie" (a grand or large symphony), but I'm sure he just meant big or long, not "Great Symphony," as it were.

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  3. The mangling of the Schubert work's nickname bothered me more than the wrong photo did.

    In Schubert's day, "grosse Sinfonie" was a genre designation. It wasn't the proper name of a work any more than "grand opera" meant the name of the piece was "Grand".

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