Originally posted by Pulcinella
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Blomstedt
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Originally posted by Belgrove View PostA friend, who is a professional musician, attended this concert (and the rehearsal) and said it was ‘among the five best I’ve ever seen, and the finest playing I’ve heard from a London orchestra’. He’s not given to hyperbole, so it must have been pretty exceptional. He didn’t think it had been recorded.
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Originally posted by oliver sudden View PostNot any more! Unsurprisingly enough.Last edited by Retune; 25-11-24, 14:13.
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Here at least is some of the last movement, officially captured by The Philharmonia:
Herbert Blomstedt is one of the world's most loved and respected conductors. A lifetime's accumulated wisdom, and a deep joy in sharing great music with both...
Although you had to be there, some sense of the memorable performance is conveyed.
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Originally posted by Simon B View PostHere at least is some of the last movement, officially captured by The Philharmonia:
Herbert Blomstedt is one of the world's most loved and respected conductors. A lifetime's accumulated wisdom, and a deep joy in sharing great music with both...
Although you had to be there, some sense of the memorable performance is conveyed.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostLet’s keep our fingers crossed for a CD release.
However, my recollection is that there weren't the array of microphones you see at a Festival Hall concert being recorded for R3/streaming/commercial release.
That recollection could be wrong, but it's consistent with the sound on that YouTube clip. Note the distinct prominence and weight of the horns and double basses - which were located next to each other behind the position of that camera. This suggests the sound was being recorded from the (admittedly high quality sounding) microphones spatially associated with that camera rather than balanced from a full orchestral array.
It does seem a missed opportunity if so.
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