This is interesting, how things have developed into a comparison between AB's Debussy and Holst -- sounds like we're talking about a conductor now!
I haven't heard the Debussy for a long time, and I remember being very impressed, but I can't imagine the Holst is too far off the mark. The thing to me is that there's a lot more "looseness" to the Debussy *on paper*. He just has a more "rubato" way of composing music. Holst, on the other hand, is quite on-the-numbers, and his music is more "squared-off". If Debussy's is like a flower, a root or a vein, Holst's is like a snowflake or a diamond. Both are beautiful, but for very different reasons. To be honest, I think that makes the Holst much more difficult to capture in MIDI, and to give a sort of "respiration". Debussy has that, even on the printed page, but I don't really think the Holst has... Many may disagree, but I think this is actually why I really liked the Holst mock-up -- it maintained a certain squareness and angularity, a certain "perfection". Do you look out over an expanse of wilderness and think "perfection", or do you find that only in a Royal Garden? Obviously, both are perfect, but totally unalike.
It reminds me of the first time I heard Stravinsky's own performance of Le Sacre. I was so accustomed to the generally romantic interpretations out there that I was quite shocked to hear such a "brittle" sounding performance. But I recognized instantly that it "fit" better within his life's work. Suddenly the whole continuum, from "Russian" through to serial, made more sense to me. This why I found myself enjoying the Holst as a new interpretation of a much-interpreted work, not just a great MIDI mock-up. To me, it was very "Holst".
cheers,
J.
I haven't heard the Debussy for a long time, and I remember being very impressed, but I can't imagine the Holst is too far off the mark. The thing to me is that there's a lot more "looseness" to the Debussy *on paper*. He just has a more "rubato" way of composing music. Holst, on the other hand, is quite on-the-numbers, and his music is more "squared-off". If Debussy's is like a flower, a root or a vein, Holst's is like a snowflake or a diamond. Both are beautiful, but for very different reasons. To be honest, I think that makes the Holst much more difficult to capture in MIDI, and to give a sort of "respiration". Debussy has that, even on the printed page, but I don't really think the Holst has... Many may disagree, but I think this is actually why I really liked the Holst mock-up -- it maintained a certain squareness and angularity, a certain "perfection". Do you look out over an expanse of wilderness and think "perfection", or do you find that only in a Royal Garden? Obviously, both are perfect, but totally unalike.
It reminds me of the first time I heard Stravinsky's own performance of Le Sacre. I was so accustomed to the generally romantic interpretations out there that I was quite shocked to hear such a "brittle" sounding performance. But I recognized instantly that it "fit" better within his life's work. Suddenly the whole continuum, from "Russian" through to serial, made more sense to me. This why I found myself enjoying the Holst as a new interpretation of a much-interpreted work, not just a great MIDI mock-up. To me, it was very "Holst".
cheers,
J.