I enjoyed Nachtshwärmer the most
Vienna Philharmonic New Year's Concert 2022
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Originally posted by LHC View PostI think the difference is that every member of the orchestra is tested every day and subject to fairly stringent standards which are closely monitored. Members of the audience are not subject to the same exacting procedures every day, and so the additional precautions for them are designed to make them as safe as possible in the absence of such regular testing.
It’s also worth noting that the audience requirements are mandated by the Austrian Government, so the Musikverein had no choice in asking the audience to meet these requirements.
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Originally posted by Alison View PostI enjoyed Nachtshwärmer the most"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Alison View PostI enjoyed Nachtshwärmer the most
I found it an enjoyable enough concert, watched this evening on iPlayer. But the 'Champagne Gallop' certainly had little 'fizz'. I think I enjoyed the interval film more with some lovely music and superb aerial shots.
Happy New Year, all!
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For the first time in 50 years, I watched the second half of the 1972 New Year's Day Concert late last night. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CrNUrSZ4Lxg
Yes, the picture quality is variable and the dance sequences are impossibly naff, but the sound quality is more than acceptable and I greatly enjoyed seeing it again. Ab0ve all, though, there is the humour and general light-heartedness that was wholly absent yesterday in Barenboim's stony face and serious disposition. 'In Vienna,' said one Hungarian statesman of the Habsburg Empire, 'the situation may be desperate but not serious'. In Willi Boskovsky, some of the elderly players and certainly some of that 1972 audience, there was a link with the old Imperial City.
Nowadays, with a global audience, recording contracts etc., the concert takes itself too seriously and needs to lighten up, forget the outside world for a couple of hours, engage conductors with a real feel for the music and bring back the sparkle and fizz to the start of a new year."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostFor the first time in 50 years, I watched the second half of the 1972 New Year's Day Concert late last night. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CrNUrSZ4Lxg
Yes, the picture quality is variable and the dance sequences are impossibly naff, but the sound quality is more than acceptable and I greatly enjoyed seeing it again. Ab0ve all, though, there is the humour and general light-heartedness that was wholly absent yesterday in Barenboim's stony face and serious disposition.
'In Vienna,' said one Hungarian statesman of the Habsburg Empire, 'the situation may be desperate but not serious'.
In Willi Boskovsky, some of the elderly players and certainly some of that 1972 audience, there was a link with the old Imperial City.
Nowadays, with a global audience, recording contracts etc., the concert takes itself too seriously and needs to lighten up, forget the outside world for a couple of hours, engage conductors with a real feel for the music and bring back the sparkle and fizz to the start of a new year.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View Post
I believe I heard Alfred Brendel quote this as a Viennese aphorism - so I'm intrigued, Pet, at your attribution to an 'Hungarian statesman of the Habsburg Empire' (and shouldn't that be 'Habsburg Kingdom, to be pedantically accurate - 'KuK'? )
It's too irretrievably a bit of national Austrian marketing IMVHO for that ever to happen....
Yes, the NYDC has become big business with TV, recordings and, let's face it, a splendid advertisement for the Austrian Tourist industry so possibly naive to think it might return to just being a concert where Vienna Greets the World."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostThe 'desperate but not serious' quip has many attributions but I've taken this one which has the feel of authenticity about it: https://www.nationalreview.com/magaz...e-not-serious/
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostI do miss the light-hearted humour that characterised the Willi Boskovsky New Year concerts and find it all a bit over-earnest nowadays. Where were the champagne corks popping in the Champagne Polka? Too tame at the end and no fizz whatever. What about the gunshots in Auf der Jagd? A woodslap just doesn't cut it. Watch any Boskovsky NYDC on youTube and see how to do it. Barely a smile from Barenboim or the orchestra and the audience seemed to lack enthusiasm behind those masks.
Strange to see Barenboim, who can conduct the most fearsomely difficult pieces without a score, with his head in the score during the Blue Danube!Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostI've just watched on iPlayer this excellent film on Barenboim:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episod...-his-own-words
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostThe film suggests (to me) that Barenboim doesn't do 'light-hearted'. Whenever I've heard him speak about music, he does so with the utmost seriousness; he's certainly an intellectual musician. And the film included a short clip of him rehearsing an orchestra (the Divan?) which demonstrated his fearsomely single-minded pursuit of his interpretation. I agree about Boskovsky - but I fear 'that kind' of performance is no more.
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Originally posted by Darkbloom View PostI recall some of DB's encores at the Proms, where he loosened up a bit, but lollipops will never be his natural habitat. I wonder if the enforced lay-off has sapped his natural vigour; he has always been a busy musician and maybe the lack of regular contact with an audience recently has had an adverse effect.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostIn one Vienna NYD concert - perhaps in the '70s, I recall them doing the Blue Danube in its choral version, as part of the main programme.
It doesn't appear in the Sony box of every work ever played at these concerts, so does anyone here know which year this was?"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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