Originally posted by Bryn
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Mozart and Mahler live tonight from the Barbican
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Originally posted by mercia View Post
admittedly I don't know the Mozart inside out but was there a short memory lapse by the soloist leading up to the last movement cadenza? something sounded odd to me at that point.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostWell!! Got your breath back yet? A truly wonderful Mahler 7, I'm still drying my eyes after as crazily brilliant a finale as I've heard, the manic mood-switching, irony and humour worthy of Bernstein himself...
And a Mozart D Minor both fiery and finely drawn, fully sung out by the BBCSO with some wonderful string and wind playing, and a young soloist who combined brilliant virtuosity - and power, especially in LVB's cadenzas - with a warmly expressive interpretative approach.
And after that terrific VW6 last night! Goodness me, I'm off to celebrate, or recover, or just remember that the real world still exists...
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostHB?
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amateur51
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostJB revealed the glories of Martinu's Symphonies to me after I'd failed to "get" them for decades. I owe him a great debt of gratitude and shall also regret his departure from the BBCSO.
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostIs this a reference to JB's live performances, his recordings, or both fhg?
That is, I've never attended any of the concerts, but the broadcasts were what I first heard; initially, with a heavy feeling that I was in for another disappointing half hour, a feeling that lifted after a few bars. The way he (Martinu and Belohlavek!) got the orchestra to "glow"; the joyous, dancing rhythmic precision; the sheer joy! Marvellous!
(I have a feeling I may have mentioned all this before!)
[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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amateur51
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostBoth.
That is, I've never attended any of the concerts, but the broadcasts were what I first heard; initially, with a heavy feeling that I was in for another disappointing half hour, a feeling that lifted after a few bars. The way he (Martinu and Belohlavek!) got the orchestra to "glow"; the joyous, dancing rhythmic precision; the sheer joy! Marvellous!
(I have a feeling I may have mentioned all this before!)
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You will not be disappointed by JB's Martinu set, Ammy. It is every bit as exciting as that Mahler 7 from the other night. Please, BBCMM, put the latter on a cover disc.
There is a lot more Moravian/Czech influence in parts of that symphony than usually noticeable in Mahler....noisier bits of the finale, to my ears, are nicked straight out of Ma Vlast.
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostMahler 7 has already appeared as a BBCMM cover disc with Noseda and the BBCPO. Pity.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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euthynicus
Yes, the Mahler looked up distinctly in the third movement, where the clumsiness of the articulation (not the playing exactly) fitted well with a plain nightmare vision, hardly troubled by modernist visions but quite exhilarating all the same. The fourth movement was voiced with great care, and again the finale had an uncomplicated exuberance that remained untroubled by its symphonic credentials or lack thereof (shades of concerto grosso). It ended a far cry from the lumpy, bad-Brahms phrasing of the first movement, let alone that grotesque travesty of the Mozart in the first half. Wasn't that unexpected, and awful? I'd never heard of the pianist, and arrived with no expectations beyond a professional and intelligent standard of Mozart playing that wasn't really met. Never mind the memory lapse; even the gabbled tempi could have been integrated into a dramatic vision of the piece, but this was porcelain Mozart, banal and untroubled by any sense of its D minor character. I wonder what DG think they have signed?
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Hornspieler
Originally posted by euthynicus View Post...that grotesque travesty of the Mozart in the first half. Wasn't that unexpected, and awful? I'd never heard of the pianist, and arrived with no expectations beyond a professional and intelligent standard of Mozart playing that wasn't really met. Never mind the memory lapse; even the gabbled tempi could have been integrated into a dramatic vision of the piece, but this was porcelain Mozart, banal and untroubled by any sense of its D minor character. I wonder what DG think they have signed?
In any case, I am totally opposed to the practice of sixteen year old "Prodigees" embarking on world tours. They need to fine tune their understanding of the composers' intentions and be prepared to learn from those whose performances are acknowledged world wide.
They should learn to listen and, by listening, will learn.
Hornspieler
** I spoke at length on this subject four years ago on the old BBC message boards and was shouted down by many others, but I still hold to the view that these young people are exploited by others for purely selfish reasons and they are doing irreparable harm to these young and immature performers.
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Originally posted by Hornspieler View PostYes, I too was singularly unimpressed by the Mozart performance. The young solist really seemed to do nothing but reproduce (most) of the notes.
In any case, I am totally opposed to the practice of sixteen year old "Prodigees" embarking on world tours. They need to fine tune their understanding of the composers' intentions and be prepared to learn from those whose performances are acknowledged world wide.
They should learn to listen and, by listening, will learn.
Hornspieler
** I spoke at length on this subject four years ago on the old BBC message boards and was shouted down by many others, but I still hold to the view that these young people are exploited by others for purely selfish reasons and they are doing irreparable harm to these young and immature performers.
Hired more for the photogenic qualities of his blond curls, than the finesse of his playing? Surely not!!
"...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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