Originally posted by Edgy 2
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Afternoon Concert - general thread
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I agree with the positive comments . Afternoon Concert is a neglected jewel in the R3 crown . With composer of the week and the lunchtime concert its fast becoming a reason to work from home in the afternoon. Also well presented by Tom McK who had the very good grace to accept a somewhat pedantic emailed correction on air from a listener.
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Originally posted by doversoul1 View PostI will be enjoying this.
Thursday 24 January
Opera Matinee: Handel's Rinaldo
Handel: Rinaldo
Rinaldo.....Paul-Antoine Bénos (countertenor)
Goffredo.....Lucile Richardot (mezzo-soprano)
Almirena.....Emmanuelle de Negri (soprano)
Armida.....Aurore Bucher (soprano)
Argante.....Thomas Dolié (bass)
Ensemble Le Caravansérail
Bertrand Cuiller (Director)
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000244f
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I enjoyed the Prague Spring Festival concerts this week Monday to Wednesday
Especially Dvorak’s Spectre’s Bride despite not knowing the text,some fabulous music though(don’t recall ever hearing it before),the Bach Cantatas,Zemlinsky Trio and Sheherezade“Music is the best means we have of digesting time." — Igor Stravinsky
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[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostGreatly enjoying this afternoon's selection - Barber's Second Essay; Britten's Violin Concerto; a couple of pieces by Rossini (good to see Richard Farnes featuring in the BBC schedules); and Dvorak's 'cello Concerto.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0002cbj
I thought Ehnes did a fine job in the Britten , and, although I didn't hear the Dvorak through to its end, Nicolas Altstaedt was fulfilling his promise in the first two movements. I particularly admired his "tempo rubato" which orchestra and conductor reflected in a most sympathetic manner. I was sorry to miss the Rodney Bennett which I've only ever heard on my LP. Now who conducted That? [Pause] The name Igor Buketoff hoves into my viewer. I wonder if other Boarders remember him - I recall he was American.
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Originally posted by Edgy 2 View PostSome terrific stuff from the BBC Philharmonic this week.
Highlights -
The Wednesday afternoon all English programme
Copland 3
Rachmaninov 2
David Matthews Vision of the Sea
There was a proposed Chandos album to include the 8th, Vision of the Sea etc., but it has never yet materialised...
The composer has an excellent, regularly updated website...
**...from which it appears that Nimbus have recorded this for release soon...
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Originally posted by edashtav View PostI felt the second Essay was spoiled by excessive slowing of the pace at its end. What should be "Q.E.D." became over-stretched and grandiloquent.
I thought Ehnes did a fine job in the Britten , and, although I didn't hear the Dvorak through to its end, Nicolas Altstaedt was fulfilling his promise in the first two movements. I particularly admired his "tempo rubato" which orchestra and conductor reflected in a most sympathetic manner. I was sorry to miss the Rodney Bennett which I've only ever heard on my LP. Now who conducted That? [Pause] The name Igor Buketoff hoves into my viewer. I wonder if other Boarders remember him - I recall he was American.
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I'm afraid that what for me in 1967 were the welcomingly memorable jabbing shapes Richard Rodney Bennett grew the first and third movements of his first symphony from, since they made 12-tone row-based music so apparently easy to grasp at one hearing, sound horribly contrived and mannered today. I seem to remember RRB being labelled "the people's 12-tone composer"at the time, possibly on the "strengths" of this work, but there were far more thrilling and enriching works in that format being composed by Goehr, Wood and Gerhardt in this country in that same time frame. Odd how ones impressions can drastically change with more musical exposure. The only part of the work that still "works" for me is the neo-romantic slow movement - Bennett as his Bergian best.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostOdd how ones impressions can drastically change with more musical exposure. The only part of the work that still "works" for me is the neo-romantic slow movement - Bennett as his Bergian best.
I read your last thought "as Bennett at his Belgian best", and then worried- which Belgian could that be?
I rejected several sheds packed with conservative Organists, Marcel Poot for having RRB's light touch but not his Serial side, and reduced a small field to Henri Pousseur - yes, S_A would know and respect his work, But, as you possibly, have realised, RRB's use of Serial techniques is skin deep, HP buys the whole deal and then advances menacingly on Darmstadt.!
At that point, I had a second look at your sentence: Bergian best -- well even BB could have espoused him as an influence.
I suspect that you've hit RRB on the head!
Oh how enthusiastic we once were over RRB who came back to GB with tidings of goodwill from Pierre! I once bored a MENSA audience rigid with my analysis of The Mines of Sulphur - the best of GB since, could it be?, Peter Grimes.
The Mines is now a yellowing period piece.
And as for RRB ... I fear that his serious music has not aged well
Nice chap, though!
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"...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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Originally posted by Edgy 2 View PostWhat a pleasure to hear Kabalevsky’s 1st Cello Concerto on the Radio (Broadcast Tuesday afternoon)
Seems like his 2nd concerto is more popular/ highly regarded, not least by cellists, but distinctly less cheerful The Naxos CD has both so we'll see!I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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