I'm delighted to see this performance from St Paul's is being broadcast next Tuesday, and good luck to the sound engineers! I just hope they won't pull back on the crescendos.
Grande messe des morts
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Originally posted by annaliese View PostI'm delighted to see this performance from St Paul's is being broadcast next Tuesday, and good luck to the sound engineers! I just hope they won't pull back on the crescendos."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostI went to a performance of Elgar's Dream of Gerontius at St Paul's several years ago (the one on DVD BBCSO/Andrew Davis) and couldn't hear a thing. Swore I'd never attend a concert performance there again. Fantastic visual setting but it's a church not a concert hall!
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Well, the crescendo just past (28 minutes in) was pretty spectacular. I think a piece like this needs a fairly reverberant acoustic - it's not subtle! The note on the Radio3 website suggests that the cavernous acoustics of St Paul's are not unlike those of Les Invalides in Paris, where the piece was first heard in 1837.
And a splendid dying echo at 33 minutes.
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View Post. I think a piece like this needs a fairly reverberant acoustic - it's not subtle! The note on the Radio3 website suggests that the cavernous acoustics of St Paul's are not unlike those of Les Invalides in Paris, where the piece was first heard in 1837.
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Can't hear the ophicleides tho'
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostWell, the crescendo just past (28 minutes in) was pretty spectacular. I think a piece like this needs a fairly reverberant acoustic - it's not subtle! The note on the Radio3 website suggests that the cavernous acoustics of St Paul's are not unlike those of Les Invalides in Paris, where the piece was first heard in 1837.
And a splendid dying echo at 33 minutes.
Taking a break from the RFH live video stream (there's a nasty clicking on the sound) to hear some of this: sounds splendid on my big system Sounds a fine performance, and as you say, marvellous lengthy reverb after big climaxes!
Amazing to have two such epic works beaming live from each side of the Thames this evening! Talk about an embarras de richesses.... (They've fixed the sound from the RFH now)"...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 Caliban View Post
Taking a break from the RFH live video stream (there's a nasty clicking on the sound) to hear some of this: sounds splendid on my big system Sounds a fine performance, and as you say, marvellous lengthy reverb after big climaxes!
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Sorry for not being part of the emerging consensus but I thought the massive reverberation swamped absolutely everything and made the whole thing into one great mush. If you didn't already know (and, in my case, love) the piece you would have absolutely know idea what on earth was going on.
I know it must have been a challenging broadcast for the on-site sound engineers (who, of course, are contracted out) but I can't help wondering whether this was somewhat beyond their capabilities.
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I was at St Paul's last night and it was a truly spectacular experience which you just couldn't recreate in the concert hall. Yes, it's a cavernous space and I was extremely luckily to have a central seat near the front of the nave (a dozen rows back), so I was caught in the glorious cross-fire from the brass (playing from the galleries). The sight (and sound) of ten timpanists in the 'Tuba mirum' was awesome; spine-tingles, goosebumps... the lot.
Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostWish I could have been there (at St Paul's). Although, as I said on the 'Church administration' thread, I would have objected to be press-ganged into ofering a prayer to god before nthe Berlioz started.Our chief weapon is surprise...surprise and fear...fear and surprise.... Our two weapons are fear and surprise...and ruthless efficiency....
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Originally posted by Il Grande Inquisitor View PostI was at St Paul's last night and it was a truly spectacular experience which you just couldn't recreate in the concert hall. Yes, it's a cavernous space and I was extremely luckily to have a central seat near the front of the nave (a dozen rows back), so I was caught in the glorious cross-fire from the brass (playing from the galleries). The sight (and sound) of ten timpanists in the 'Tuba mirum' was awesome; spine-tingles, goosebumps... the lot.
All I can say is.... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XG63OtsKC7k
"...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 johnb View PostSorry for not being part of the emerging consensus but I thought the massive reverberation swamped absolutely everything and made the whole thing into one great mush. If you didn't already know (and, in my case, love) the piece you would have absolutely know idea what on earth was going on.
I know it must have been a challenging broadcast for the on-site sound engineers (who, of course, are contracted out) but I can't help wondering whether this was somewhat beyond their capabilities.
Should the engineers, faced with a concert in a tremendously lively acoustic, try to make it sound like it was recorded in a dry acoustic? Surely not: they should be trying to convey something of the aural experience the audience in the building are having, reverberation and all. Furthermore, the conductor (if he is any good) will have taken the acoustic into account when setting tempi and making pauses for the reverberation to die away: to eliminate the reverberation would make the performance sound most peculiar.
Like a previous poster, I have been to performances in St Paul's where the reverberation made the music virtually inaudible. I thought the engineers managed to steer an excellent middle course between that and a completely false clarity that nobody in the building experienced.
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Panjandrum
Originally posted by Il Grande Inquisitor View PostI was at St Paul's last night and it was a truly spectacular experience which you just couldn't recreate in the concert hall. Yes, it's a cavernous space and I was extremely luckily to have a central seat near the front of the nave (a dozen rows back), so I was caught in the glorious cross-fire from the brass (playing from the galleries). The sight (and sound) of ten timpanists in the 'Tuba mirum' was awesome; spine-tingles, goosebumps... the lot.
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