Originally posted by gradus
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Afternoon Concert - general thread
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Agree with Master Jacques about the Sibelius VC. The Elgar I found somewhat less unsatisfactory; there were parts where the glory of the music shone through - possibly despite the performers or is that being too catty?
This afternoon's programme did illustrate what I have mentioned before - a complete concert chopped up and spread over the allotted time, in this case with the opening item appearing at 2pm (I didn't hear it as I was late tuning in), then lots of bits and pieces, then the two major works. There would have been an interval in the original concert but did there need to be the Schubert piano arrangement this afternoon between the two works?
The rest of the week the 3 pm big slot is another serialisation, this time of Handel's Israel in Egypt.
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I was satisfied with the Elgar, a well-paced perfromance. I liked the way he managed the tempi overall, so that the motto theme emerged steadily at the end of the first and last movements as if it had been there in the background all the time. Overall quite as good, in my view ,as the Rattle/LSO performace earlier this year..
And I liked the orchestra, especially the brass, sonorous and well-tuned. It's good to hear a German orchestra play Elgar as he was first acclaimed there as a European comoser before he was praised as an English composer in England.
I'm sorry to see others weren't so pleased. Do try to listen again, if you can.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostI was satisfied with the Elgar, a well-paced perfromance. I liked the way he managed the tempi overall, so that the motto theme emerged steadily at the end of the first and last movements as if it had been there in the background all the time. Overall quite as good, in my view ,as the Rattle/LSO performace earlier this year..
And I liked the orchestra, especially the brass, sonorous and well-tuned. It's good to hear a German orchestra play Elgar as he was first acclaimed there as a European comoser before he was praised as an English composer in England.
I'm sorry to see others weren't so pleased. Do try to listen again, if you can.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostI was satisfied with the Elgar, a well-paced perfromance. I liked the way he managed the tempi overall, so that the motto theme emerged steadily at the end of the first and last movements as if it had been there in the background all the time. Overall quite as good, in my view ,as the Rattle/LSO performace earlier this year..
And I liked the orchestra, especially the brass, sonorous and well-tuned. It's good to hear a German orchestra play Elgar as he was first acclaimed there as a European comoser before he was praised as an English composer in England.
I'm sorry to see others weren't so pleased. Do try to listen again, if you can.
Two of my current favourite RVW 5ths also feature German orchestras. I love the Brucknerian ambience of the opening, in Walter Hilgers's reading with the Brandenburg Orch. [Genuin]; the whole performance has a sense of rediscovery. And there's an understated yet radiant reading from a so-called "minor" orchestra which I treasure - Douglas Bostock with the Argovia Phil. on Coviello:
British - Orchestral Works by Elgar, Vaughan Williams & Holst. Coviello: COV91515. Buy SACD online. Argovia Philharmonic, Douglas Bostock
This is a real keeper for me, especially as the Holst coupling has the same exquisite, fresh qualities. The Elgar Froissart is a little underpowered. But spirit counts for so much more than orchestral virtuosity in RVW5, as in so many others.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostThe rest of the week the 3 pm big slot is another serialisation, this time of Handel's Israel in Egypt.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostHa, Ha! I had a sneaking feeling I'd misremembered which Elgar Symphony Simon did; thanks for putting the record straight . I felt the Manze 1 was as good as the Rattle 2, or as President Nixon said, 'I think that is what I thought I meant'.
Adding what MJ says about German orchestras and Elgar, Barenboim’s recordings of the symphonies came off pretty well and certainly 40+ Years of maturity showed more measured approach than his youthful 1970s recordings with the LPO.
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Indeed, cloughie, though it may be hair-splitting, but last time I heard Barenboim's first recording of the second symphony I preferred it to his Berlin version. At any rate it's good to have so many fine performances today, when the deaths of Hickox and Handley threatened to make a gap in Elgar interpretation.
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Another wonderful(not) tweak to the programme - a teaser snippet of the 3pm work. So at 2-15, following a movement from a Haydn mass (what happened to the rest - your guess is as good as mine) straight into a few bars from Schumann No1, with Penny Gore valiantly trying to make something of it before introducing the next item. How many people listening to the programme(or afternoon show as Ian Skelly referred to it last week - another sign of the times?) will have thought "oh that sounds good I must listen" - sufficient to justify the gimmick? I would suggest that generally those who wanted to hear the Schumann would have known about it and quite possibly (probably?) have chosen to avoid the preliminaries of 2-3pm.
My initial reaction was confusion - had I missed the beginning (despite not having left the room) followed by, was the schedule timing wrong. Penny Gore burbling reassured on both fronts but I could cheerfully have done something physical, preferably painful, to whoever was responsible... I have quite enough problems and worries at the moment without R3 frazzling my brain this way. Afternoon Concert is becoming more and more a no-go area for me; splitting works up not just over the afternoon's programme but over different days, playing movements instead of whole works, insertion of adverts(used to be a blessedly advert-free zone), and now teasers for the 3pm "main work"...
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On Afternooon Concert yesterday, 3 January at about 4.55 pm , just before the end of 'Sinfonia Antartica' the announcer broke in on the music before it had finished. Perhaps he thought the wind machine wasn't part of the msuic, but in fact the cellos and basses are still playing at that point.
I've tried complaining to the BBC online but their system seems to out of order. I was asked to 'click the link ' in an e-mail they sent me but the 'link' was just a paragraph of computer-print, so there awas nothing to 'click'! A useful way of stopping us complaining.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostOn Afternooon Concert yesterday, 3 January at about 4.55 pm , just before the end of 'Sinfonia Antartica' the announcer broke in on the music before it had finished. Perhaps he thought the wind machine wasn't part of the msuic, but in fact the cellos and basses are still playing at that point.
I've tried complaining to the BBC online but their system seems to out of order. I was asked to 'click the link ' in an e-mail they sent me but the 'link' was just a paragraph of computer-print, so there awas nothing to 'click'! A useful way of stopping us complaining.
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