Jordi Savall

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  • austin
    • Nov 2024

    Jordi Savall

    I thought this was worth sharing with you.......

    'Music is music. It’s equal, whether it’s old, new, jazz, Celtic, Sephardic, or Muslim. The importance is what we can do with it — the emotions, the spiritual dimensions we can bring. Music is what makes us human. If the world had more space for music, we would have more peace.'

    While missing his late wife and performing and recording partner, Jordi Savall continues to cross centuries, and cultural and geographic boundaries in celebration of early music. Next month Cal Performances will bring him back to the Berkeley Festival & Exhibition.


    A
  • Pegleg
    Full Member
    • Apr 2012
    • 389

    #2
    Forever the gentleman ambassador of music. I'm listening to Celtic Viol (vol.2) right now.

    Jordi Savall guests on “In Tune” tonight and this Friday's “Live in Concert” from the Luftansa Festival is not to be missed.

    Comment

    • kuligin
      Full Member
      • Nov 2010
      • 230

      #3
      Originally posted by austin View Post
      I thought this was worth sharing with you.......

      'Music is music. It’s equal, whether it’s old, new, jazz, Celtic, Sephardic, or Muslim. The importance is what we can do with it — the emotions, the spiritual dimensions we can bring. Music is what makes us human. If the world had more space for music, we would have more peace.'

      While missing his late wife and performing and recording partner, Jordi Savall continues to cross centuries, and cultural and geographic boundaries in celebration of early music. Next month Cal Performances will bring him back to the Berkeley Festival & Exhibition.


      A
      I really disagree with Savall, all music is not equal and the musicans vocation is not what " we can do with it" but to try and realise the composers directions, that needs both scholarship and musicality

      Which may be explains why so many of Savalls recordings of Constantinople etc to my ears sound rather closer to the 20th century than the 15th century to my ears

      Comment

      • ferneyhoughgeliebte
        Gone fishin'
        • Sep 2011
        • 30163

        #4
        Originally posted by kuligin View Post
        I really disagree with Savall, all music is not equal
        Yes, I have problems equating Jedward with the Eroica, too!

        the musicans vocation is not what " we can do with it" but to try and realise the composers directions, that needs both scholarship and musicality
        Especially in the Music that lacks a "composer" and little in the way of what we think of as a "score" today.

        Yes, with the Eroica, the performers' highest and most difficult duty/task/calling, I believe, is to realize what Beethoven wrote on the page - but that, in itself, is something "[the performers] can do with it". I would have preferred it if he'd said "the emotions and spiritual dimensions we can bring out" (of the scores) because that's what I (as an admirer of Savali's work) would like to believe he meant.

        I like your "scholarship and Musicality": the scholarship to know the notes of the work, its background and what the composer took for granted (so didn't feel the need to write in the score); and "Musicality": the ability to play/sing well, to use one's imagination intelligently (what does "Allegretto" mean in this context?) and to be able to communicate this both to other Musicians and to the listener.
        [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

        Comment

        • Mr Pee
          Full Member
          • Nov 2010
          • 3285

          #5
          Originally posted by Pegleg View Post
          Forever the gentleman ambassador of music. I'm listening to Celtic Viol (vol.2) right now.
          I have that- it's a marvellous CD!
          Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.

          Mark Twain.

          Comment

          • Pegleg
            Full Member
            • Apr 2012
            • 389

            #6
            I came late to classical music after many musically fallow years. I only discovered Jordi Savall and his various collaborators after seeing the film “Tous les Matins du Monde” and began to explore a little of his extensive discography.

            I cannot speak of the authenticity of his 15th century music, but his recordings of Purcell, Lully, Sainte Colombe, Marin Marais, Francois Couperin, Bach, Rameau, Boccerinhi, Haydn and Mozart continue to give hour after hour of aural delights.

            How about this?

            Jean-Philippe Rameau: La Orquesta de Luis XV - Concierto de Jordi Savall



            or

            Jordi Savall Les Voix Humaines(Bach,Abel,Forqueray,Marais,etc)




            Now I think I'm in the mood to fandango ...

            Comment

            • BBMmk2
              Late Member
              • Nov 2010
              • 20908

              #7
              What a p[ity I be missing that on "In Tune". JS always good to hear. I am involved with the school orchestra tonight!
              Don’t cry for me
              I go where music was born

              J S Bach 1685-1750

              Comment

              • MickyD
                Full Member
                • Nov 2010
                • 4763

                #8
                For me, Jordi Savall's very best recording is of François Couperin's "Les Nations", made back in 1986 for Astrée. Magical!

                Comment

                • pilamenon
                  Full Member
                  • Nov 2010
                  • 454

                  #9
                  Originally posted by MickyD View Post
                  For me, Jordi Savall's very best recording is of François Couperin's "Les Nations", made back in 1986 for Astrée. Magical!
                  Very exciting performance of Geminiani's La Folia variations in the Friday evening concert. Well worth hearing on iplayer if you can.

                  Comment

                  • ShoveCoupler

                    #10
                    'Music is music. It’s equal, whether it’s old, new, jazz, Celtic, Sephardic, or Muslim. The importance is what we can do with it — the emotions, the spiritual dimensions we can bring. Music is what makes us human. If the world had more space for music, we would have more peace.'
                    While much of this Savall quote looks platitudinous, the point about "... what we can do with it" does ring true to me; it makes the composer's score a starting point from which to create a musical experience rather than placing it on a lofty pedestal with musicians grovelling about at the bottom vainly trying to realise the ideal.

                    That's what I like about Early Music, much of it is quite sketchy, performers need to use their musicality to make it work, there's a sense of working with, rather than being a slave to, the composer.

                    Comment

                    • Ariosto

                      #11
                      Well, I'm playing terribly badly at the moment so after hearing bits of those links to the Jordi Savill performances, maybe I should join the bandwaggon and start doing all this HIPP stuff. I could always wear earplugs if I couldn't stand the noise ...

                      Comment

                      • Pegleg
                        Full Member
                        • Apr 2012
                        • 389

                        #12
                        Is it just the low SQ of YouTube you disliked, or does the whole baroque thing put your teeth on edge? Oh well, one person's meat and all that …

                        Personally, I thought Friday's Live in Concert Savall sandwich with a Zelenka and Bach filling was just so many delicious earfuls...

                        For afters I listened to this :

                        Zelenka: Officium Defunctorum, ZWV 47 | Václav Luks & Collegium 1704 - http://youtu.be/1d2ylTKwWHU

                        Looking forward to next week's offerings from the Lufthansa festival.

                        Comment

                        • Ariosto

                          #13
                          Originally posted by Pegleg View Post
                          Is it just the low SQ of YouTube you disliked, or does the whole baroque thing put your teeth on edge? Oh well, one person's meat and all that …

                          Personally, I thought Friday's Live in Concert Savall sandwich with a Zelenka and Bach filling was just so many delicious earfuls...

                          For afters I listened to this :

                          Zelenka: Officium Defunctorum, ZWV 47 | Václav Luks & Collegium 1704 - http://youtu.be/1d2ylTKwWHU

                          Looking forward to next week's offerings from the Lufthansa festival.
                          Hi Pegleg

                          I much prefered the Zelenka - and even though I would have some misgivings about the balance and the sound at times, I thought this was much, much better. The recordings of the other things were very muddy which did not help.

                          On the whole though I found the Zelenka much more acceptable and I listened for about 10 minutes.

                          Thanks for not taking me too seriously!!

                          Comment

                          • Pegleg
                            Full Member
                            • Apr 2012
                            • 389

                            #14
                            Tisk tisk, only ten minutes? How about some quack factor 15 from Hotteterre: http://youtu.be/zOMF6yg09Qs I promsie the second sonata is more soothing from this stellar cast of hipsters. Or this could be your next mobile ring tone: http://youtu.be/EtBOofQShuM Admittedly at 1.50min it's a tad long. Happy listening

                            Comment

                            • Ariosto

                              #15
                              Originally posted by Pegleg View Post
                              Tisk tisk, only ten minutes? How about some quack factor 15 from Hotteterre: http://youtu.be/zOMF6yg09Qs I promsie the second sonata is more soothing from this stellar cast of hipsters. Or this could be your next mobile ring tone: http://youtu.be/EtBOofQShuM Admittedly at 1.50min it's a tad long. Happy listening
                              I'm afraid that I can't take more than 10 minutes of early music. And with a lot of it 30 seconds is about my limit. I'm afraid most of the composers are, to be honest, rather boring and repetitive. Whilst there are one or two early composers who (in my opinion) were greats, most I can't really be bothered with.

                              I play some JS Bach, and a lot of Haydn and Mozart. Occasionally some other composers if I like performing their music. But mostly I would rather play music from about 1750 up the the present day.

                              Comment

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