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Oh dear. I switched off during the Byrd. I just don't like the sound the BBC Singers make, I'm sorry to say.
"...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..."
I only switched on in time for the Byrd, and thought they did it well. When I heard the Gibbons on iPlayer, I was disappointed for all the usual reasons.
Since the BBC has only the one full-time choir, then they are bound to give them a wide repertoire to perform. Should they then sack them and use only freelance singers? In an ideal world I suppose the BBC would have two choirs, one of which would specialise in early music. Dream on...
Since the BBC has only the one full-time choir, then they are bound to give them a wide repertoire to perform. Should they then sack them and use only freelance singers? In an ideal world I suppose the BBC would have two choirs, one of which would specialise in early music. Dream on...
I’m sorry but I don’t quite follow the logic. Do you mean for the benefit of the Singers or the audience? As far as I am aware, none of the BBC orchestras seem to be inclined to perform anything pre-classical but the world isn’t really any poorer.
Yes, you (one) could argue that there is no such thing as theright or the best way to perform Byrd but all the same….
What seems counter-intuitive is to programme material for the BBCS in which there are readily available a dozen and more genre-specialist ensembles, when the BBCS#s own unrivalled specialism is manifestly elsewhere.
Seemed almost perverse. Madrigal-like late 16th / early 17th century repertoire is just not their strength, and I fear it showed last night.
What seems counter-intuitive is to programme material for the BBCS in which there are a dozen and more genre-specialist ensembles readily available, when the their own unrivalled specialism is manifestly elsewhere. Seemed almost perverse.
Yes, but then they'd have to pay the BBCS to take time off and spend money on another ensemble.
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