September 14, 2022
MY CORNER by
Boyd Cathey
My Latest
Article in CHRONICLES Magazine – Anton Bruckner, a Sign of Contradiction
Friends,
As I have done in the past, I like to publicize
articles and essays I have written originally for and have been published by various
publications. And by now, if you’ve been reading my occasional pieces, you’ll
know that I write about a wide diversity of topics, in particular on the arts
and music.
I fully understand that such subjects may not
interest those accustomed to my items dealing with current politics, Southern
history, religion, or foreign affairs. But, I believe that the defense of our
cultural heritage and its artifacts, including our legacy in great art,
architecture, literature, and music, are
also vitally essential to our survival and the survival of Western
Christian civilization, which is now so critically imperiled, especially from
within.
So, I pass on today an essay I recently had published
in CHRONICLES magazine.
I strongly encourage you to subscribe
to it, if you have not already done so, as it is practically the only place among printed journals (it also is available online) where you will receive a
full, intelligent, and at times very graceful, defense of who we are and
represent as a civilization.
My essay is titled: Composer Anton Bruckner: A Sign of Contradiction in the Modern Age.
I offer here (below) the opening few paragraphs, and for a limited
time (about two weeks or so), you can read the essay in its entirety.
However, after that a paywall may exist.
Again, I recognize that this is not
something you may be accustomed to read by me; nevertheless, I urge you to give
it a try…and also to subscribe to the finest journal of traditional
conservative thinking out there.
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Noted
British conductor Sir Simon Rattle has described Europe at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries as “sitting on a volcano,” with the
rise of radical ideologies, revolutionary ferment, amazing advances in science,
the questioning of all previous certitudes in faith, and new currents in the
arts.
This
was especially true in opera as well as in symphonic music, where two giants—
Anton Bruckner (1824–1896) and Gustav Mahler (1860–1911)—towered over others.
The two men are often grouped together, as they wrote lengthy symphonic works
and composed numerous choral and vocal selections. Both men were musical
geniuses who employed all the many achievements, techniques, and accumulated
wealth of musical knowledge in their respective compositions. Mahler looked
resolutely forward musically to the uncertainties, to the angst, to the
disjointedness, and to the 20th-century
collapse of Western culture’s civility and orthodoxy, while Bruckner,
incorporating the same rich artistic tradition and heritage, resolutely looked
backward to what had gone before. He offered in sound an incredibly and
uniquely creative defense of that tradition and its orthodoxies.
Bruckner
was born in Ansfelden, in Upper Austria, on Sept. 4, 1824. His father, who died
when Bruckner was only 13, was the local schoolmaster. For much of Bruckner’s
early education, he attended school at the famous nearby Augustinian monastery
of St. Florian, where he developed an extraordinary interest in and familiarity
with the great Baroque musical heritage created and cultivated by the Catholic
Church. There he received extensive training in the organ, choral music, and
violin—and he excelled brilliantly in all three. Because of his precocious
talent, at an early age he became organist for the Augustinians. Bruckner’s
firm Catholic faith, simple but profound, would be the incredibly rich and
vibrant foundation for his later work as a composer—his, as he described it,
“giving back to God in music what he had received from Him through grace.” He
consciously took as his mentors Beethoven and, before him, the masters of the
Austrian Baroque, who would form the essential inspiration for Bruckner’s later
monumental symphonies….
PLEASE CONTINUE READING
THE FULL ARTICLE AT:
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