We went to the Festival Hall tonight for a concert by the LPO and Jurowski, but had the misfortune to be seated in what must have been two of the worst seats in the house, LL 41 &42 in the Rear Stalls, about halfway back under the Balcony overhang.
The first item, the Suite from The Love of Three Oranges sounded passable, as this is mostly brash and noisy music but fun to hear. I was puzzled by the almost complete lack of bass, but things were much worse when Emmanuel Ax played Stravinsky's Capriccio. In all the louder passages he might just as well have not been there, and when the piano was audible it had a curiously honky tonk quality.
I was very depressed by this, so in the interval I went down to the Box Office. They dealt courteously with my complaint, but said that I would have to pay for an upgrade. I pointed out that the concert was already half over, and so they agreed to change our seats, offering two very nice front stalls at no extra cost.
It turned out that our new seats were £4 special offers for orchestra friends !
Mr Ax then gave us a beautifully deft performance of the Haydn Piano Concerto in D, in a warm spacious acoustic, and the concert ended in a stunning performance of the Shostakovich 6th
Now, how many millions did the refurbishment cost to make a piano inaudible?
If we complain politely when faced with bad sound, perhaps the management might wake up to the awful shortcomings on the South Bank, which I have been visiting regularly for nearly sixty years. It had its faults before, and no doubt there has been some general improvement, but in my experience it's awfully patchy.
The first item, the Suite from The Love of Three Oranges sounded passable, as this is mostly brash and noisy music but fun to hear. I was puzzled by the almost complete lack of bass, but things were much worse when Emmanuel Ax played Stravinsky's Capriccio. In all the louder passages he might just as well have not been there, and when the piano was audible it had a curiously honky tonk quality.
I was very depressed by this, so in the interval I went down to the Box Office. They dealt courteously with my complaint, but said that I would have to pay for an upgrade. I pointed out that the concert was already half over, and so they agreed to change our seats, offering two very nice front stalls at no extra cost.
It turned out that our new seats were £4 special offers for orchestra friends !
Mr Ax then gave us a beautifully deft performance of the Haydn Piano Concerto in D, in a warm spacious acoustic, and the concert ended in a stunning performance of the Shostakovich 6th
Now, how many millions did the refurbishment cost to make a piano inaudible?
If we complain politely when faced with bad sound, perhaps the management might wake up to the awful shortcomings on the South Bank, which I have been visiting regularly for nearly sixty years. It had its faults before, and no doubt there has been some general improvement, but in my experience it's awfully patchy.
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