Sir Colin Davis in action

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  • amateur51
    • Jan 2025

    Sir Colin Davis in action

    On the earlier Cancellitis thread there was speculation about why Sir Colin Davis was cancelling a concert in Boston etc.

    This lunchtime I toddled along to the Royal Academy of Music in the most wonderful Spring sunshine to hear the Academy Concert Orachestra play Bruckner symphony No 6 under his direction.

    The stage was full of young people with their instruments, the women in a variety of highly colourful dresses, the poor blokes in standard black tie. The audience held a fair number of senior peiople from RAM, including Sir Peter Maxwell Davies and RAM's Principal, Jonathan Freeman-Attwood plus run-of-the-mill civilians like me.

    Having heard the recent news of Sir Colin's fall at the Royal Opera House and mindful of his wife's death last Summer, I must say that I was more than a tad apprehensive but the familiar mane of white hair bobbed up from the stairs and there he was wiggling his way between the players to the podium. He's certainly lost weight and was looking a little drawn.

    He started conducting standing up but after a few bars he sat down on a high- backed chair, occasionally leaning over to the left to grasp the brass rail. All the familiar CD gestures were there, and the orchestra rose maginificently to its task. It struck me initially that he took the opening Majestoso at a fair old lick but I soon settled down and the tempo was sustained. The words that kept popping into my head were affection and autumnal and yet there was plenty of gusto and some very fine playing from the brass and woodwind, lots of women present in both sections. His directions were clear and consistent, and his capacity to drive to a climax seemed undiminished. He also got some fine quiet playing.

    Once the performance was over it was clear to see that Sir Colin was now tired, stumbling a little as he walked to & fro through the orchestra to take his well-earned applause. But he was his usual courteous self towards his musicians and particularly to the leader, whom he invited to walk with him off the stage.

    I must say that I was relieved to see him in action again and, while is clearly slightly frail at the moment, I'm not talking Klemperer frail, thanks goodness.

    And a bonus part of this concert? It was free!
  • Nick Armstrong
    Host
    • Nov 2010
    • 26601

    #2
    Darn, amateur - now that is a fine way to spend a spring lunchtime, had I known it was happening I'd have bunked off and joined you. Great to hear about CD. I've gone to similar events at the college to hear Haitink (Mahler 6 and Shostakovich 8 ) but I would love to have heard today's Bruckner.

    One of the pleasures of last year was to cycle on a sunny Sunday morning to the Academy, attend one of their Bach Cantata cycle concerts, and repair for lunch to Marylebone High Street... Must remember to check their 'events' listing.

    Thanks for the post, old chap
    "...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..."

    Comment

    • gurnemanz
      Full Member
      • Nov 2010
      • 7442

      #3
      Your post reminds me that Colin Davis conducted the first classical concert I ever heard live. It was at the Proms in 1968 when I was 19. I even checked the archive. It was quite a programme with Frederik Prausnitz taking on the second half.

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      • amateur51

        #4
        Originally posted by Caliban View Post
        Darn, amateur - now that is a fine way to spend a spring lunchtime, had I known it was happening I'd have bunked off and joined you. Great to hear about CD. I've gone to similar events at the college to hear Haitink (Mahler 6 and Shostakovich 8 ) but I would love to have heard today's Bruckner.

        One of the pleasures of last year was to cycle on a sunny Sunday morning to the Academy, attend one of their Bach Cantata cycle concerts, and repair for lunch to Marylebone High Street... Must remember to check their 'events' listing.

        Thanks for the post, old chap
        The reason I didn't mention it is that, unusually for these concerts, this one was an all-ticket affair and there was a sizeable queue on the day that booking opened so I guessed that people without a ticket might not get in.

        The events listing is full of exciting stuff and well worth keeping an eye on

        Comment

        • Nick Armstrong
          Host
          • Nov 2010
          • 26601

          #5
          Originally posted by amateur51 View Post
          The reason I didn't mention it is that, unusually for these concerts, this one was an all-ticket affair and there was a sizeable queue on the day that booking opened so I guessed that people without a ticket might not get in.
          Oh absolutely! No hint of criticism was intended, my dear fellow!

          I am browsing the RAM website simultaneously with checking back here
          "...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..."

          Comment

          • salymap
            Late member
            • Nov 2010
            • 5969

            #6
            Morning Am 51 and thanks for your review of the concert at the RAM with Colin Davis. I'm sorry he seems so frail as I still think of him as a young man, conducting the Chelsea Opera Group and Kalmar orchestra when he started out on the long road. Conductors jealously guard their marked [bowed, etc] parts in a Hire Library and he and Alex Gibson were in and out to borrow their special sets and make sure they were still complete. I suppose he's about 83 now. Wow, where did all the time go. Lucky you to be able to get to the RAM easily.

            Comment

            • amateur51

              #7
              Originally posted by salymap View Post
              Morning Am 51 and thanks for your review of the concert at the RAM with Colin Davis. I'm sorry he seems so frail as I still think of him as a young man, conducting the Chelsea Opera Group and Kalmar orchestra when he started out on the long road. Conductors jealously guard their marked [bowed, etc] parts in a Hire Library and he and Alex Gibson were in and out to borrow their special sets and make sure they were still complete. I suppose he's about 83 now. Wow, where did all the time go. Lucky you to be able to get to the RAM easily.
              Hello salymap!

              Yes I did feel very lucky indeed. And I fell to thinking as the performance proceeded, that after all the troubles of Sir Colin's previous year, how wonderful it must be to be conducting such glorious music with a band of young, talented, enthusiastic bright-eyed people who would obviously play over a cliff for him - not that he asked them to. I hope that it was great pick-up for him.

              I don't want to over-emphasise the frailty issue - it's just that he wasn't the slow-walking debonaire character of old with the slightest swagger - now there is just a hint of hesitation in the gait. The smiles that he gave to the applause & to the orchestra were echt-Davis as was the deep bow.

              Comment

              • Chris Newman
                Late Member
                • Nov 2010
                • 2100

                #8
                Originally posted by gurnemanz View Post
                Your post reminds me that Colin Davis conducted the first classical concert I ever heard live. It was at the Proms in 1968 when I was 19. I even checked the archive. It was quite a programme with Frederik Prausnitz taking on the second half.

                http://www.bbc.co.uk/proms/archive/s...sub_tab=artist
                I remember it well. In fact Colin conducted my first ever live orchestral concert in the Capitol Theatre in Horsham with the ECO at the Horsham Music Circle's 21st Anniversary Concert in 1961. He conducted my first ever Prom in 1967: The Trojans part 2. Indeed I have heard him conduct 5 complete performances of the Trojans (2 at the Proms). I have heard him more than any other conductor. I have heard him in Prague conducting Elgar and in Britain with lots of Berlioz, Tippett (Imany premieres) and Mozart. He has just discovered Nielsen. Always an explorer I wish him well. He is a very much loved hero of mine.

                Prauznitz was one of the few conductors that Gerard Hoffnung drew in his famous books: for modern music Hoffnung suggested follow the dots as Prauznitz's baton ecstatically moved and you could see a naked woman. I treasure the memory him finishing a Prom of difficult modern music (in those days) with Johann Strauss's Emperor Waltz. Whether the joke was Prauznitz's or William Glock's "bums on seats" policy I was never sure.

                Comment

                • Norfolk Born

                  #9
                  Originally posted by salymap View Post
                  I suppose he's about 83 now.
                  Spot on, salymap..he'll be 84 in September. I wonder if he still enjoys his knitting?

                  Comment

                  • salymap
                    Late member
                    • Nov 2010
                    • 5969

                    #10
                    Was he a clarinet player originally? Iremember a day when Colin and Alex Gibson met by accident in the library, both in uniform as they were doing their National Service. The knitting I didn'tknow about

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                    • Chris Newman
                      Late Member
                      • Nov 2010
                      • 2100

                      #11
                      Yes, Colin was a clarinet player at Christ's Hospital School in Horsham, continued to study it at the RCM and in the band of the Household Cavalry. In his programme blurbs of the early sixties he claimed to have carried a baton in his kitbag in case the Director of Music was taken ill. No longer the firebrand of the sixties and seventies his manner and conducting style has become avuncular and gentle. He discovered knitting relaxed him and in 1996 he was voted Pipe Smoker of the Year, a title formerly held by Rupert Davies (the original Maigret and brother of Meredith, the conductor), Tony Benn and Harold Wilson. Like Bernard Haitink, Semyon Bychkov and Vasily Petrenko he is a revered teacher of conducting and youth orchestras. He also has a fondness for lizards. Some years ago one of his publicity shots showed him with an enormous bearded dragon sitting in his abundant hair and snuggled up cheek to cheek.

                      Comment

                      • salymap
                        Late member
                        • Nov 2010
                        • 5969

                        #12
                        Thanks, interesting Chris. I never really knew him but, as I said, he came for his own orchestral parts in the early days.
                        Many years later my boss [in publishing], insisted that I go to see him at the RFH with our rather low key catalogues.Predictably he was scornful about Adam Carse, Gordon Jacob, et al, but we did have a little Elgar and Delius. I crept out of his dressing room thinking how Sir Adrian had made me feel good when doing the same job that I disliked very much. Colin was much younger then of course.Good health to him.

                        Comment

                        • Norfolk Born

                          #13
                          Originally posted by Chris Newman View Post
                          a title formerly held by Rupert Davies (the original Maigret and brother of Meredith, the conductor)
                          What amazing facts one learns from these threads. I shall now have to get Ron Grainer's theme tune out of my head, thanks to you!

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                          • amateur51

                            #14
                            Originally posted by OFCACHAP View Post
                            What amazing facts one learns from these threads. I shall now have to get Ron Grainer's theme tune out of my head, thanks to you!


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                            • Chris Newman
                              Late Member
                              • Nov 2010
                              • 2100

                              #15
                              We had Rupert Davies:
                              !! YOU TUBE CRIME WAVE !! This was the first successful TV run for Georges Simenon's Inspector Maigret that ran for four series of 13 episodes between 1960 a...

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                              The French had no less than Jean Gabin:
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