Originally posted by jayne lee wilson
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R3 in Concert one-stop shop
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostWish I could help but I lack the knowledge to comment properly and also, increasingly, I haven't found what's on offer to my taste which, when it comes to symphonies in particular, has become less "inclusive" in recent years I fear. I never was overly keen on the"big stuff" (Rach, Sibelius, Nielsen and such like) in the first place but would listen more often than not, but now not even that. Tonight's Elgar would have been a listen not so long ago but now I just don't feel inclined to do so.
Do you think part of the decrease in commenting might be due to the increase of listening at different times? A flurry of reaction all at the same time as the concert finishes isn't quite the same as coming in over a period of time as and when folks catch up. Or have we lost the people who are willing and able to comment?
Many here make the effort for The Proms; this could still happen with the Evening Concerts too. But once the live relay is over, the stream off of Sounds does become just another choice among many...still very attractive but only if you enjoy that sharing of the same event....and can rely on other listeners being there to respond.
It would help of course if the Radio 3 Concerts were in CD-quality lossless (the short-lived "Concert Sound" still poignantly recalled), rather than restricted to the 320 kbps AAC stream, good though it is....
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Originally posted by Maclintick View PostI stopped commenting here when it became blindingly obvious that soi-disant "Friends of Radio 3" weren't particularly interested in any of the excellent live concerts which appear on the channel. For instance, I attended the BBC Symphony's Frank Zappa Barbican Total Immersion day last spring, which included a film and 3 concerts which were revelatory, and an all-Sibelius fest of rarities last autumn. No comment here...Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by BBMmk2 View PostI see that last night’s concert by the LPO/Gardner with Steven Osborne (piano), was rather good I hear and I’ll be catching up this morning.
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In the course of checking this evening's concert I looked up the venue https://archjourney.org/projects/herz-jesu-kirche/
It will be interesting to hear what the acoustic is like, but I must confess my first thought was " you wouldn't want those doors open when it's windy"
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Missed out on the start of this evenings concert due to childcare duties but now listening to some lovely singing which the tv says is anton bruckner mass in e minor (Sanctus) and seems I have bruckners 4th symphony to look forward to.
Domingo Hindoyan conducts Royal Liverpool Philharmonic in Anton Bruckner's Symphony No 4 - the only symphony he gave a title to, 'Romantic' - in a concert given last month. But this is no programmatic pastiche of love and longing. Instead Bruckner evokes images and moods from his beloved Austria's medieval countryside, replete with knights, nature, hunting and magic. In the first half, the Canadian/American violinist Timothy Chooi conjures up an intensely romantic nostalgia for the Caledonian Highlands by way of Max Bruch's equally Romantic Scottish Fantasy. Miriam Skinner presents.Annoyingly listening to and commenting on radio 3...
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Originally posted by JasonPalmer View PostFor some reason this thread not appearing in new posts, how odd, did anyone else listen to the evening concert yesterday ?
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Mozart and Beethoven this evening, good stuff.
Live from the Victoria Hall in Hanley, Stoke-on-Trent
Presented by Tom McKinney
Conductor Leslie Suganandarajah returns to the BBC Philharmonic for a visit to one of the orchestra's favourite audiences and venues, the Victoria Hall in Hanley.
This engaging and tuneful programme ends with the warming melody of Saint-Säens's Symphony No.3, his “Organ Symphony”. Organist Jonathan Scott joins the orchestra for this luscious music, which is almost exactly contemporary with the organ and the hall; all three completed within two years in the 1880s.
Three knocks at the door open our concert as we launch into Mozart's overture to The Magic Flute and a lone timpanist paves the way for the lyricism and dance of Beethoven's Violin Concerto; Tobias Feldmann makes a welcome return to the orchestra as soloist.Annoyingly listening to and commenting on radio 3...
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Originally posted by JasonPalmer View PostMissed out on the start of this evenings concert due to childcare duties but now listening to some lovely singing which the tv says is anton bruckner mass in e minor (Sanctus) and seems I have bruckners 4th symphony to look forward to.
Domingo Hindoyan conducts Royal Liverpool Philharmonic in Anton Bruckner's Symphony No 4 - the only symphony he gave a title to, 'Romantic' - in a concert given last month. But this is no programmatic pastiche of love and longing. Instead Bruckner evokes images and moods from his beloved Austria's medieval countryside, replete with knights, nature, hunting and magic. In the first half, the Canadian/American violinist Timothy Chooi conjures up an intensely romantic nostalgia for the Caledonian Highlands by way of Max Bruch's equally Romantic Scottish Fantasy. Miriam Skinner presents.
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Originally posted by JasonPalmer View PostGlad you enjoyed it, I thought it was particularly good but didn't want to mention it as still a relative novice in comparing performances. #easilypleased
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostFinally caught up with this today . Tremendous performance. Domingo Hindoyan Has really got the Bruckner touch and the RLPO played out of their skins esp a wonderful horn section . Highly recommended. I see they also did Bruckner 8 recently to glowing reviews . Liverpool’s fast becoming a bit of a Bruckner stronghold.
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Excellent prospects for the 1930 hrs relay tonight, Danish NSO/Blomstedt, with Schubert 6 and Berwald 2. I love the Berwald Symphonies and live performance is rare; the unusual backstory to the incurably catchy 2nd is fascinating - lost for 60 years (full score never found), reconstructed from 4-stave sketches by 1914, revised again in 1968 by another editor....
Wonderful piece we are so lucky to have!
So gather round the Radio, everyone....Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 06-02-23, 18:11.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostI saw a terrific 4th with V-Petrenko up there a few years back, physically stunning, really tore into the piece. A great 6th too. They've always done Bruckner well on the rare occasions conductors programmed it. No more live attendance possible for me, but the Rozhdestvensky and Poschner CD Cycles are more than compensatory.....
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Excellent prospects for the 1930 hrs relay tonight, Danish NSO/Blomstedt, with Schubert 6 and Berwald 2. I love the Berwald Symphonies and live performance is rare; the unusual backstory to the incurably catchy 2nd is fascinating - lost for 60 years (full score never found), reconstructed from 4-stave sketches by 1914, revised again in 1968 by another editor....
Wonderful piece we are so lucky to have!
So gather round the Radio, everyone....
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