Originally posted by Flay
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Concerts you're glad NOT to have (had) tickets for...
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Originally posted by french frank View PostUngrateful? I should say!
"With THUNDERING CANNONS AND INDOOR FIREWORKS"
The sort of cone things that turn into great long grey serpents are really scary but they crumble to death when you touch them and well before you can stick them down your sister's chest.
Of course in the RAH they'd have to be big as a dustbin and if they turned the lights right down there'd be total panic. And if they fired the cannons at that point...What a laugh!
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Originally posted by Caliban View Post
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Alison - sorry - I've been so bound up with the Bruckner thread I missed your question. The hall was pretty full- I got a return in the second row the day before and there was little left in the piano side of the stalls. Also extra platform seats which usually means a sell out . The audience were very enthusiastic - though whether in response to the playing or Pogorelich's reputation it's difficult to judge. But despite the bravos at the end as I say the piano stool got a tell tale shove with the foot under the Steinway.
There's quite a good twitter strand -Pogorelich- which pretty much contains the full range of those that absolutely hated his playing ; those that admired it ; and those that , like me , couldn't believe the quality of the Brahms after what he did to the Schumann . Fact is it's much easier to write in criticism than in praise. Some of the phrasing and fingering in the last movement of the Schumann had me shaking my head in disbelief . One example - he played two of the final c major chords cross hands (why?) and this was after playing the two handed arpeggiated coda with hands slightly out of sync. The fingering of the soaring final melody was very eccentric - using in places an accented third finger jab where every other pianist would use the fifth finger didn't help the legato line. Other extraordinary moments - lowering the piano stool with the left hand while playing with the right - I think during the Brahms. But the Brahms was beautifully played - not just flash virtuosity but some lovely characterising of each variation . With this and the molto lento Bruckner on Saturday night it has been quite a week...
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Originally posted by Heldenleben View PostPogorelich
This review is a thoughtful one: https://thebflatsheep.wordpress.com/...festival-hall/"...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..."
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Thanks Caliban. Yes I read this review earlier courtesy of the twitter strand . It's a rare sympathetic review amongst some very harsh ones . It does give rise to the question of what responsibility the critic has when clearly the performers is , to put it tactfully, somewhat out of sorts . Or does that responsibility lie with the promoter or the artist's team who put the artist before the public ? Despite the criticisms I am glad I went and , as always , learnt something about the music . I don't agree that this concert should not have gone ahead or that Pogorelich , or the audience , was in some sense being exploited. I do feel a bit for the page turner though - quite a few whispered asides throughout from the pianist - what was going on ?
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