Originally posted by Bryn
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Rattle conducts Elgar
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostLike his finales, discussions on Bruckner go on forever!
Will we be getting an equally good LSO Rattle Elgar 1. I hope so!"I do not approve of anything that tampers with natural ignorance. Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone. The whole theory of modern education is radically unsound. Fortunately in England, at any rate, education produces no effect whatsoever. If it did, it would prove a serious danger to the upper classes, and probably lead to acts of violence in Grosvenor Square."
Lady Bracknell The importance of Being Earnest
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The last movement has now appeared on Youtube:
Sir Simon Rattle conducts the fourth movement Moderato e maestoso of Elgar's Symphony No 2, recorded live in concert at the Barbican in London on 11 Septembe...
Rattle conducting without a score despite, as far as I'm aware, never having conducted it before (certainly not recently?), and clearly much moved by the stupendous conclusion, as we all are.
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Another fine Elgar 2 last night from Mark Wigglesworth and the BBC Philharmonic in Radio3 in concert. Listening to the same orchestra in the same symphony in a recording from eleven years ago under Vasily Sinaisky, I wondered (no disrespect to these two fine musicians) if Elgar 2 is now 'easy',a work the BBC Philharmonic could almost play without a conductor.
Fantasy of course. Yet I remember one trenchant poster on the old board insisting that any good performance was to the credit of the orchestra not the conductor. Does anyone remember the edition of 'Andre Previn's Music Night' where he let the LSO continue and finish the first movement exposition of Beethoven 's Fifth without him? I recall the Vienna Philharmonic giving a competent if not illuminating Mozart G minor (K550) at the Proms under a guest conductor unkown to me but apparently a famous comedian in America, and wondering if they were looking at him at all, and listening to James Levine's set of Mozart Symphonies with the same orchestra on DG I've occasionally wondered if it would sound much different had he not been there. I heard they voted for him to conduct this set and wondered then of they did so because he was a genial fellow who would't interfere too much with the way they played . De mortuis nil nisi bonum, of course, and I've never found fault with his conducting.
Listening carefully, however, to any performance, I'm inclined to think that it's the little details that make the difference between good and outstanding, especially when one says 'I never realised that before about this work', whether it's an unfamiliar piece he had to teach them (Tod Handley in Bax's 4th) or a new look at an old warhorse (Silvestri and the Philharmonia in Tchaik 5 in 1957, a recording that made me sit up, even after Herbert) .
Please forgive this ramble. I'm off down the 'Pool now to see if I can get my umbrella back I think I left there some weeks ago.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostI remember one trenchant poster on the old board insisting that any good performance was to the credit of the orchestra not the conductor.
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