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From: IEDSRI@aol.com
Date: Sat, 21 Oct 1995 14:17:48 -0400
Subject: Duffield & Delius
To: Love-Hounds@uunet.uu.net
Ron Girardin asks whether 150 Pounds for an original Bill Duffield program is a reasonable price. It is not. At last year's International Kate Bush Convention in London, Homeground's Peter and the KBC's Lisa distributed what seemed like hundreds and hundreds of copies of this item from the stage -- free of charge, if IED remembers correctly -- to anyone who asked. Although wonderfully collectible, the Bill Duffield programme is plainly NOT yet rare. It's likely that your Record Collector advertiser picked up a handful of these things at the Con, and is now trying to take advantage of other fans' naivete. IED enjoyed reading Frederick Delius' opinions as transcribed by BuckyLucky, but he takes issue with the claim that his music is "altogether free of Classicism". One needs first to decide on a definition of that term, but certainly his rejection of what IED supposes (D. doesn't specify in the quotation BL reproduces) is the music of the Second Viennese School would tend to place Delius rather closer to the conservative camp of his era than otherwise -- an aesthetic camp which, judged from this perspective only, numbers composers as unlike him as Rachmaninoff and Barber. Judging from the remarks BL cites, it seems likely that Delius would at least agree with IED that an artist can achieve "originality" without breaking utterly from widely accepted traditions -- an unorthodox view, perhaps, but by no means a modern one. -- Andrew Marvick (IED) S R I