Anyone else watch this ?
Delius film last night
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostAnyone else watch this ?"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by salymap View Postsure the fault is mine."...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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I thought the film itself was flawed by having too many 'talking heads'. And the sequences where conductors (e.g.Andrew Davies) were seen looking at a score and emoting were a bit OTT.
The most interesting point for me was the one made by Mark Elder...that Delius put very little in the way of phrasing and dynamics into his scores and that it was Beecham's markings that most interpreters follow. All in all, the programme's stance on Delius was one of exaggerated reverence, and to suggest he was of equal stature as a composer to Elgar is pushing things a bit far IMO.
I enjoyed the contributions by Schola Cantorum as much as anything.
But thanks BBC for screening (twice) a film about music.
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amateur51
Originally posted by salymap View PostI still have it on the TV hard drive from last year but haven't bothered to watch it again, so...may delete it.I love some Delius, the rest of his music is hard for me to pin down. Even Beecham's performances couldn't win me over, sure the fault is mine.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostI thought the film itself was flawed by having too many 'talking heads'. And the sequences where conductors (e.g.Andrew Davies) were seen looking at a score and emoting were a bit OTT.
The most interesting point for me was the one made by Mark Elder...that Delius put very little in the way of phrasing and dynamics into his scores and that it was Beecham's markings that most interpreters follow. All in all, the programme's stance on Delius was one of exaggerated reverence, and to suggest he was of equal stature as a composer to Elgar is pushing things a bit far IMO.
I enjoyed the contributions by Schola Cantorum as much as anything.
But thanks BBC for screening (twice) a film about music.
and Mark Elder's comments were most interesting
I've always been a bit sceptical of the Beechamites and this showed what a seemingly arrogant manipulative not at all likeable character he was.........
Having spent some time at an electroacoustic music festival and conference I was most struck by how one could consider Delius's music as a "place to be" as opposed to a "narrative".
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Lateralthinking1
Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostI would agree with this
and Mark Elder's comments were most interesting
I've always been a bit sceptical of the Beechamites and this showed what a seemingly arrogant manipulative not at all likeable character he was.........
Having spent some time at an electroacoustic music festival and conference I was most struck by how one could consider Delius's music as a "place to be" as opposed to a "narrative".
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Stephen Whitaker
Originally posted by ardcarp View PostI thought the film itself was flawed by having too many 'talking heads'. And the sequences where conductors (e.g.Andrew Davies) were seen looking at a score and emoting were a bit OTT.
The most interesting point for me was the one made by Mark Elder...that Delius put very little in the way of phrasing and dynamics into his scores and that it was Beecham's markings that most interpreters follow. All in all, the programme's stance on Delius was one of exaggerated reverence, and to suggest he was of equal stature as a composer to Elgar is pushing things a bit far IMO.
Is there is anyone with a better understanding of the stature of Elgar than Anthony Payne?
It would have been quite acceptable for him object to any comparison between the two
but he discussed Delius without any suggestion that he considered him to be a lesser composer.
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I didn't see it all but it totally gripped me and 'explained' Delius to me in a way that opened my ears to what he wrote. The suggestion thst he had heard not a note of his music played by an orchestra until aged 37, he sponsored the London concert in 1899 is astonishing and the fact that Elgar's Enigma vars received their first performance only weeks later in the same hall utterly eclipsing Delius's concert is appalling bad luck.
Somebody described the music as 'filmic' and I agree, it certainly lent itself to the lovely images selected by the director. I was also surprised to learn that On Cooking the First Hero's folk tune is in fact Norwegian and a tribute to Greig. And what about that excerpt from The Mass of LIfe scored for solo horns and strings, what imagination, the sheer beauty of it.
Good too to have Beecham, a biographer of Delius, talking about the composer he did so much to champion, edit and revise, and it seems, to bury.
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