Originally posted by french frank
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A la recherche du Third Programme perdu
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostActually, the FLVs for M2 and M4 have their audio in aac format. Only M1 uses mp3. You would need to use something like HiDownload Platinum Edition to grab the FLV, then FLVExtract.exe to extract the aac file. That can then be transcoded to mp3 with Free M4a to MP3 Converter.
PM me if that all seems too much.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostAlps, I've been emailed and asked to post this talk by Hans Keller in response to your 'dalek in auto mode' comment
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Lastly, Cooke does a comparison of performances of Mahler Symphony No 4' in an attempt to divine an authentically Mahlerian performing tradition.' There is no date given for this 49 minute talk but Deryck Cooke died sadly young at 57 in 1976 and the performances available for his comparison will give listeners a clue or two.
As a clue to the date of Cooke's talk, he mentions round about the 2 minute mark that the Klemperer recording with the Philharmonia was issued 'a few months ago'. The recording was made in April 1961, though I don't know when it was first issued, but I imagine that puts the talk in the early 60s.
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HERE is a recording I made in 1966 of the Leamington man Wilfrid Mellars, in a discussion with a northern American named Earle [sic] Brown, said to be a "sidekick of Cage." I have always loved the sound of Mellers's opening phrase: "Well Earle Brown . . ."
Indeed for the worldly-wise there are many chuckles in this programme, which lasts forty minutes.
I had not until recently been aware of Mr. Mellers's having himself been a composer with a considerable number of works of all kinds to his name. He wrote, for example, two symphonies. But they are both marked "withdrawn" in the Grove list; indeed something like nine of what appear to be major works from his pen are thus marked, and that includes late works as well as early ones - a fact I find curious since most composers continue do they not to find some value in the works they issue at the various stages in life.
Mellers also wrote prolifically (or prolificly if you prefer) on music, both in book form and in journals. He was in fact rather influential as an arbiter of taste, and here we must take issue with him, since he encouraged the introduction and increasing acceptance of "popular music" into hitherto serious circles - groups of youths ululating and thwacking their "guitars," that sort of carry-on. One knows in one's heart that behaviour of that kind is unacceptable does one not.
Indeed the fact that so many British schools of to-day are more like prisons than schools is in the end largely due to Mellers's activities. He misguidedly attempted to "bridge a gap" but in fact permitted cultural standards to slide. Another result of that is the present lamentable and squalid condition of the B.B.C.Last edited by Sydney Grew; 28-01-11, 00:02.
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Here:
is the last recording of old broadcast talks we have readily available. This one, which we recorded in 1966, goes on for thirty-two minutes. It is given by the talented pianiste Susan Bradshaw, who presents her own most interesting illustrated exposition of all the compositions of M. Boulez. (And the announcer introduces her very correctly as "Miss Bradshaw," which would regrettably not be done to-day.)
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Originally posted by Sydney Grew View Post
Here:
is the last recording of old broadcast talks we have readily available. This one, which we recorded in 1966, goes on for thirty-two minutes. It is given by the talented pianiste Susan Bradshaw, who presents her own most interesting illustrated exposition of all the compositions of M. Boulez. (And the announcer introduces her very correctly as "Miss Bradshaw," which would regrettably not be done to-day.)
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Originally posted by Mark Sealey View PostBryn,
Have you been (has anyone been) to, has there ever been, a complete performance of Vexations?
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I think (and i'll have to check ) that there have been a couple of non relay performances with a single player
as to La Monte Young
a piece like "Dream House" (is it a piece or a place to be ?) had a version that lasted from September 1966 to January 1970. Composition 1960 #7 could be seen to be much more or a marathon for the audience (but ultimately very satisfying)
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Alf-Prufrock
Originally posted by Bryn View Post... which I also recorded to a series of cassettes, though unfortunately only a few stretches remain
Surely you were not intending to listen to the composition all over again?
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Firstly because there were some 20 pianists involved (some played two stints) and their different approaches to the piece were of interest to me (from John TIlbury's highly consistent performance without pedalling, so relying totally upon finger legato technique, via John White's exquisitely 'salon' approach, to Michael Nyman's attempt at playing each repetition differently) and secondly as raw material for a project I was working on at the time which involved multi-tracking the 840 cycles as one (with, effectively, 840 simultaneous performances of a single cycle.
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