Yes I do!jancivil wrote: If this kind of stuff is to be summarily dismissed as 'fashionable political correctness', you must believe that there is no such problem.
jancivil wrote: Which means that you have to believe that the real reason there isn't a lot more of female composers to draw from and herald as great music is that the female is inferior;
No, I Don't, and that commentary makes you appear as prejudicial. It's the old dichotomy: Who is not in favour of me is against me
OK, let's elaborate a little on my thinking. Staring with Clara Wieck (Clara Schumann, by marriage). History preserves her memory as one of the greatest pianists of her time. And we all know that the status of "great pianist" is by far much more important than the one of "great composer". The former was (and still is) much more revered than the latter. Liszt was famous and enjoyed glory and fortune for being a great pianist, not a great composer. His works were many times dismissed by his contemporaries. Now, if Clara Schumann indeed wrote some pieces that we are missing today, by all means, bring them on. Are those pieces better than the thousands of pieces written by other contemporaries, that are also now forgotten? The blogger didn't told us much, except in the part that she mocked about the way the critique was dismissing the pieces. She didn't even claimed that they deserved more attention,. and are indeed great. She just mocked. And she conveniently left without mention that the same Clara was revered as one of the great pianists of her era (not bad for a victim of "sexism").jancivil wrote: Do you actually believe that all along there was an equal opportunity, women always had the same shot at it? "Political correctness" is not a good sign. It always comes from the "conservative", ie., reactionary standpoint. Maybe you could stand to read the blog, a man wrote it.
More or less at the same time, we had women triumphing in the field of literature: Jane Austen, the Brontë sisters, Mary Shelley (who I believe did not need her famous husband help to triumph), Ann Radcliffe, ... (fill at your will). So, may we conclude that there is sexism in music but not in literature? Or that women writers are harder fighters than those that compose? Or are they given more opportunities? Clearly there is space for thinking here.
Proceeding with the absurd, I would say that, more than sexist, the classical music panorama is racist, since I don't remember a black guy that triumphed as a classical composer, and even as an interpreter there are just a couple of them (maybe Wynton Marsalis). Yet, there are lots of black people triumphing in other genres. And if you look, you will find other musical genres where women also do not seem to be interested on (I don't see many women rappers, if any at all). Sexism too?
Regarding Amy Beach. Is she on pair with her countrymen contemporaries like the well known Charles Ives, Grofe, Copland, Barber, or even Gershwin? I have to confess I don't know nothing from her, but I will listen to her work open mindedly, as I usually do with the works of whatever composer I contact, if anyone care to point me some place where I can listen to her to have an idea.
Finally, you have modernly names like Kaija Saariaho, Pauline Oliveros, Wendy Carlos, Delia Derbyshire, Bebe Barron. How did they do to gain international acknowledge?
To end this rather long post, I'd like to call attention for an excellent article written by Jonathan Foreman and called "The Timothy Hunt Witch Hunt". It's about the 72 year old british biochemist and Nobel Prize Timothy Hunt, and how he was persecuted, banned from all his posts and jobs, just because he had the audacity (or ingenuity) of making a joke about women in public. here is the link: https://www.commentarymagazine.com/arti ... itch-hunt/
It's a very interesting reading, and a good example of how pernicious this "political correctness" thing can be.