Good concert, dire presenting as usual by PT and laughable camp ballet .
VPO New Year's Day Concert 2015
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Most of them conduct without a score, I think... But they do have three performances of this programme to conduct so by showtime (ie New Year's Day) it should have 'stuck', and no, it is NOT just a case of remembering what time to beat.
Have a look at this, it is just glorious and addresses this point rather well... And this is Carlos of course...
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Originally posted by Caliban View Post[...]it's pretty amateur not to time the prattle properly...
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostThey all do, don't they? Karajan certainly did - resulting in his forgetting the traditional Blue Danube and starting to conduct the Radetsky March.
Incidentally, if you go to the Vienna Philharmonic Museum in the Haus der Musik in Vienna http://www.hausdermusik.at/en/sound-...t-floor/33.htm there is an exhibit where you can 'conduct' the Annen Polka. I don't know how it does it but the music reacts to your beat and, believe me it is very difficult and the results are hilarious.
I went in 2008 and it's well worth a visit."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostThe orchestra member's comment ("we don't want to change the character of the orchestra too much") is a perfectly valid one on its own terms though it just doesn't fit into today's world, unfortunately. In these days when all orchestras sound the same, the VPO still manages to sound like no other. It manages this by handing down the tradition, often from father to son, and where members stay for very long periods. A constant turn around of women members getting pregnant and leaving the orchestra has the potential to dilute that special sound that the VPO has.
Some people get hot under the collar about this issue though I can see both sides of the argument. However, I most definitely want the VPO to retain that unique sound quality however it goes about it.I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostWhat issue of The Oldie is that, Alison? I must seek it out. As it was (vide Wiki) written to comemorate the battle of Custoza in 1848, when (along with the battle of Novara shortly afterwards) Radetsky crushed the Italian independence movement for another 10 years, and given that it was first played to a clapping and stamping audience of Austrian officers, difficult to avoid the merest hint of military overtones - how does RO wriggle out of that one?
But the "Radetsky-Bankett-Marsch" wasn't actually played because the Hofball-Musikdirektor failed to appear to conduct the orchestra. He was lying ill from scarlet fever in his apartment in the Kumpfgasse, where he lived with his mistress, Emilie Trampusch, and their several children. Eventually word got to Anna Strauss - his wife - who sent Josef and Eduard to investigate, but they were refused permission to see their father. Then on 25th September a messenger arrived at Anna Strauss's house to say that her husband had died suddenly during the night.
Josef went straight away and found the apartment door open, the apartment in a state of complete disarray, Emilie Trampusch and children gone and his father lying dead on a bed.
[Most of this taken, badly translated and heavily paraphrased, from Josef Strauss - Genie wider Willen, by Franz Mailer]
So Johann Strauss never performed the march; it was his eldest son who introduced it.
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Originally posted by Prommer View PostHave a look at this, it is just glorious and addresses this point rather well... And this is Carlos of course...
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=dunn_2wAs0o
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostBut the "Radetsky-Bankett-Marsch" wasn't actually played
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Originally posted by greenilex View PostMight it not be possible to find women players older than the ones we saw? People who might be more experienced, have completed their families, and (shock horror) stand up to the rows and rows of stuffy old buffers full of Weinachtskugeln or whatever?
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slarty
Originally posted by Demetrius View PostWell, that's the thing - if the modus opperandi is slowly introducing the children etc. from the older players, then naturally there are only a few young players in the mix, and of those, only half would likely be women. The keyword is slow - if you don't cast new faces from the outside of the big philharmonic family, or introduce some affirmative action scheme, the inclusion of women will be slow, and those included will be young, even if the orchestra has stopped discriminating against women and picks their additions without regard to gender (whether it has completely or not - who knows?).
First the trial year, must be successful after which as a full member of the Opera Orchestra, paid by the city, virtually as a civil servant, one has to wait for the invitation.
Not all members of the Opera orchestra are in the VPO. One can be invited to try out at a concert or two(or a tour) or one can be elected as a full member.
The opera orchestra has almost 170 players - the VPO has approx 100 active members.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View Post[...]When I tried, as someone suggested here last year, to access ORF I couldn't get the sound but there was a message saying it was for copyright reasons only available on the radio.[...]
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