Air - your "take" on the Feldman quote makes a lot of sense to me, you obviously thought about it in a deep way. What you say about J.S. Bach makes a lot of sense to me. Actually, that very excerpt you posted is my favourite part of the
Well Tempered Clavier. I've always thought of it as different than the others, since I got an old tape with Wanda Landowska playing it on one of her not entirely "authentic" harpsichords. I'm no musician, but the first time I heard this part, it kind of sounded more similar to me to someone like Mahler than J.S. Bach. I was pretty amazed at that. & your explanation there corresponds with my initial "gut" feelings. Another one is his final (3rd) movt. from the
Brandenburg Concerto #3. It isn't far away from "Minimalism" & I've read Aussie writer Andrew Ford's corresponding opinion on this (he mentioned it in passing, I have made a thread about this, which I'll need to tend to soon, as there have been good replies) & it was also made into a modern ballet I remember watching about 20 years ago.
...All in all, it's true that the past and the future can often be intertwined. One couldn't really say that neo-classicism in it's time was conservative, though it did look significantly to the past for ideas and inspiration, did it not?
Well it's funny how we (or at least I) tend to think of Stravinsky in relation to the "Neo-Classical" movement between the two world wars. But there were many others who worked with it's ideas strongly in mind. Mentioning J.S. Bach, one of the first composers to explicitly "resurrect" many of his techniques in a quite literal way was Bartok. He was probably as big a "Neo-Classicist" as Stravinsky at the time, yet everyone talks of Bartok's "dissonance," "astringency" & all this stuff. But things like the old contrapuntal forms are never far beneath the surface of his works. Eg. the
Music for Strings, Percussion & Celesta has a lot of this kind of thing going on, incl. a canon (or two?). Bartok was just as much a traditionalist as a radical, imo. It's just that people tend to "judge a book by it's cover." Same for Schoenberg in the 1920's, he incorporated a lot of the old forms - minuets, gavottes, these ancient dance things - into his works then (eg. the
Serenade &
Suite, both chamber works, & I think the former even has a guitar & mandolin!). Apparently, some of the high-end serialist theoreticians after 1945 were a bit bemused & critical that Schoenberg chose to do this kind of thing, straight after "discovering" or "developing" whatever the serial technique. They thought it was a kind of joke - eg. why would you "invent" this revolutionary "new" technique & then write these pretty little dance things, which are quite tuneful & even a bit fun in some ways. Of course, he didn't "rigidly" apply the serial technique in these works, & that may also have brang the ire of those later guys up against these works.
...And what about minimalism? Sometimes it seems that the greatest innovations are those that are actually the most backwards. And that's certainly some food for thought.
Yes, there is often a synthesis of the "old" in "new" ways. I can hear the ghost of guys like J.S. Bach, Beethoven, Debussy, Stravinsky, etc. etc. in many quite recent works (eg. post 1945). I won't go further, I want to hear what others say. These thoughts have been brimming in my head for a while now.
BTW - If anyone out there could point to a source with the context of that Feldman quote - eg. date, what he said before & after that sentence, these types of things, it would be useful. I remember reading this quote in another source, and it said that Feldman whistled a tune from a Sibelius symphony before he said this (hence it being mentioned in a book on Sibelius, which I provided the link to in my initial post)...