Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie
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Baroque Spring
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amateur51
I realise now that I am so disenchanted with much of R3's output that I'm unable to comment from any sort of current knowledge base. I listen to TtN and Lunchtime concert/Ao3 most days but that's about it til the evening concert but by then there's food to get sorted etc. Oh dear :woe:
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View Post
It's been a welcome change from the usual 19th century domination of the schedules.
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the extensive trailers
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Anna
I appear to be in the minority. Apart from the dreadful (and best quickly forgotten) Baroque Bites and RN Day, I've really enjoyed it. This is because, apart from mainly Purcell and Rameau, I've always said baroque isn't my thing. My opinion has now changed and it certainly hasn't been an overloaded total immersion as they have done in the past.
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I think I'm largely with you Anna, because as you say, it hasn't been total. On the one hand there has been some R3 silliness (making one want to throw crockery at the Baroquerie), but on the other we have heard a lot of really good stuff from fine composers whom history and the unsurpassable JSB and Handel had confined to the sidelines. Today's EMS was a good example. Glad you're converted!Last edited by ardcarp; 23-03-13, 21:28.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostThere was a truly gruesome one this morning where snippets from the beginning, middle and end of the final chorus of the St Matthew Passion were spliced to fit under about 30 seconds talk. There was no sense of keeping any sort of harmonic progression...it was an act of vandalism.
But that sort of thing could have happened outside of any sort of 'season' - and probably will.
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Originally posted by JFLL View PostHardly 'domination', except in the sense that many major composers were nineteenth-century
deserve to be played frequently.
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostDoes any composer 'deserve' to be played frequently?
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Hmm. There's a lot of argument on here about R3 'dumming down' - part of that is surely a concentration on 'the best' - & a few of 'the best' at that. One of the benefits of something like 'Baroque Spring' is that 'the best' can be heard in context - that is, along with composers who aren't as well known now (& who, in fact, could very well have produced music every bit as good).
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The whole thing seems to be a bit of an illusion. If you look at the playlists, there don't seem to be many more baroque pieces than you would expect in a programme lasting two or three hours. Take out the Bach, Handel, Vivaldi and perhaps some Purcell, much of which is fairly standard fare, and the rest seems to be a standard mix of of classical/19th. c., plus the overture from Candide and a short ride in a fast machine.
The main element of the 'season' seems to be the regular repetition of the marketing label 'Baroque Spring' throughout the schedule.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostThe whole thing seems to be a bit of an illusion. If you look at the playlists, there don't seem to be many more baroque pieces than you would expect in a programme lasting two or three hours. Take out the Bach, Handel, Vivaldi and perhaps some Purcell, much of which is fairly standard fare, and the rest seems to be a standard mix of of classical/19th. c., plus the overture from Candide and a short ride in a fast machine.
The main element of the 'season' seems to be the regular repetition of the marketing label 'Baroque Spring' throughout the schedule.
Another totally missed opportunity to foreground generally lesser known but important Baroque composers: Rameau, Buxtehude, etc., etc. How many pièces de clavecin or trio sonatas have they played during 'BS'? (Oh, just look at that acronym! )It loved to happen. -- Marcus Aurelius
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Originally posted by french frank View PostThe whole thing seems to be a bit of an illusion. If you look at the playlists, there don't seem to be many more baroque pieces than you would expect in a programme lasting two or three hours. Take out the Bach, Handel, Vivaldi and perhaps some Purcell, much of which is fairly standard fare, and the rest seems to be a standard mix of of classical/19th. c., plus the overture from Candide and a short ride in a fast machine.
The main element of the 'season' seems to be the regular repetition of the marketing label 'Baroque Spring' throughout the schedule.
Still, the enterprise certainly seems to have united those critics who think R3 has been swamped by baroque music and others who think there's nothing that's all that different
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Originally posted by aeolium View PostI don't think that's accurate, at least if you look at the whole schedule rather than one programme like Breakfast or Essential Classics.
JEG's Saturday Classics was billed as part of the season , and it had two pieces by Bach. CotW helped by choosing baroque composers (the aforementioned Bach, Handel, Vivaldi and Purcell). So that has been the entire morning, all progs billed as being part of the season.
I suppose the point I was making was that usually there has been a distinct shortage of such works in those programmes, so even a quite small number allows them to claim that this was something special. Count out TEMS (because baroque is part of its ordinary remit). This was the 'bit of an illusion' that I referred to.
Marais, Rameau, Leclair and others, a Scarlatti oratorio, Corelli, Pergolesi, Zelenka, Porpora, Telemann etc. I don't recall hearing those in your average couple of weeks.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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