About
a hundred years ago, when symphony orchestras still drew large—and
young!—audiences, Sibelius’ music featured on many programs, particularly his
series of romantic-modernist symphonies. Not since Beethoven and Brahms was a
composer’s voice so naturally attuned to symphonic thought, yet without making
the listener feel the heavy lifting of contrapuntal development and sonata
form. Like his contemporary, Gustav Mahler, Sibelius began with both feet
planted firmly in the late Romantic period, yet with each symphony, he ventured
further afield into the thickets of Modernism—on his own terms. Sadly, though
his music is still often played by orchestras around the world, the average
listener knows little of his music beyond orchestral hits like Finlandia,
Valse Triste, or an excerpt from a longer suite, The Swan of Tuonela. His symphonies are
often seen as derivative of Brahms or Tchaikovsky by some, while others find
them too thorny or difficult (particularly the later ones). Many people would
much prefer to hear something more familiar and toothsome and call it a night.
Saturday, August 27, 2016
Sunday, August 14, 2016
From the Vaults of the Imagination: The Forgotten Short Stories of Clark Ashton Smith
Clark
Ashton Smith is a name that exists at the periphery of science fiction and
fantasy lore, a name often evoked but rarely read. He is sometimes dismissed as
an imitator of Lovecraft; at other times, as a writer whose exotic, hot-house
prose often carried him away from his subjects. Yet the titles of his numerous
short stories are too tempting to leave to second-hand wisdom: works like “The
City of the Singing Flame,” “The Dark Eidolon,” and “Ubbo-Sathla” remind me of
long-lost AD&D campaigns and hidden, forgotten evils buried in the appendix
of the Fiend Folio. There’s some truth to this, as without Clark ’s stories, so much of
the modern fantasy mythos would cease to exist. Along with Lovecraft and
Tolkein, Smith’s stories were mined for their outlandish visions of Atlantean
worlds and unspeakable terrors. What others left behind was Smith’s unique
language—he is unparalleled as a crafter of prose in fantasy writing—and his ability
to create tension and twist endings. Smith excelled at the short story, and a
10-page tale from Smith often contains more beauty, wonder, and mystery than
many a thousand-page tome making lavish promises on its book jacket.
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