Sunday night’s 3 hour retrospective of classical music broadcasts on BBC2 over its six decades
https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episod...-bbc-two-at-60
brought as many frustrations as unearthed gems.
The former consisted mainly of the captions which regularly obliterated the lower quarter of the screen - certainly during the early part of the programme. I haven’t finished it yet but there seemed to be fewer as it went on, as if the captioners tired of straining to tell us which sporting event the music had decades later come to be associated with etc etc Even when relevant, they occasionally drove me mad: one explained Otto Klemperer’s magnetic conducting technique whilst completely obscuring him during the Beethoven 9 footage…
Then again, they sometimes failed to say who the performers were - in the ‘Handel at St John’s’ segment, I spotted Christopher Hogwood at the keyboard and I think Neville Marriner leading the orchestra… no clues from the captions though Plenty of caption stuff about Lang Lang in the next clip though. (At least, I suppose, the ears were spared a presenter talking over the music).
So… a mess, basically, and a shame as some of the clips were marvellous to see and hear: an extraordinary Ponelle dramatisation of Carmina Burana, King’s Choir in 1970 etc. Perhaps above all for me, the apparently effortless heart-rending power of Philip Langridge in Child of our Time (eclipsing his fellow soloist and the gurning Rattle) - what a communicator, I miss him. Worth it so far just for that.
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Just finished the programme (some fast-forwarding through the odd operatic bit, I must confess, not least the Glastonbury Valkyries…). Glad I saw the 1812 performance from Leningrad though - no stinting on the cannons
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