Baker's Dozen

Artists discuss the 13 records that shaped their lives

9.

Brahms – Piano Quartet 2 in A Major op 26

Brahms is like Beethoven in that he’s a romantic composer. I don’t consider Beethoven to be a classical composer at all, well, not in the late quartets anyway. I don’t get on with the pre-Beethoven characters like Mozart and Hayden. You can see that Brahms takes from Beethoven. Sometimes his music is sentimental but I don’t mind sentimentality. It is a mood and like any mood, if it’s done well, it’s fine. Any idiom can be good. It’s like what Nabokov says about writing: “There’s only one school of writing and that’s the school of talent.” Brahms had great talent. Another good thing about Brahms was Benjamin Britten couldn’t stand him and I find Britten really effete.

Selected in other Baker’s Dozens: Lord Spikeheart, Tom Ravenscroft
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