Originally posted by David-G
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Lunchtime Concerts one stop shop
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"...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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If you enjoy Debussy/Ravel try today's recital by Cedric Tiberghien, both Arabesques and Miroirs. Mr T is very much his own man and I don't hear anyone else's influence in his interpretations, but I'd be interested in other's views. He has all the technique needed and his playing is very much to my taste.
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I agree gradus, a lovely and stimulating recital. He's a pianist I have been following since his first coming to my attention on the R3 New Generation Artist scheme, and who continues to grow in stature. I particularly enjoyed the Miroirs and the Szymanowski Sheherezade, a piece new to me, and note that he has a disc being issued on Hyperion next month of the complete Masques and Etudes. His disc of the Ravel violin and piano works (also on Hyperion with Alina Ibragimove) is great favourite.
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Richard Tarleton
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostFine Bach from James Ehnes just now - also caught the Chaconne the other day.
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Some interesting stuff in todays lunchtime mash up.
Abrahamsen's SQ #1 is a really invigorating work on first listen.
Written at a very young age, it was picked up by the Danish Quartet at similarly young ages, apparently.
It is certainly Abrahamsen's guide the the SQ, fresh and a little bit "In your face". He seems to be saying, " Here I am, listen up, THIS is what I can do with a string quartet".
Worthy of a listen if you missed it, or don't know it.
Last edited by teamsaint; 05-02-14, 18:22.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Tchaikovsky Quartet no. 3; Brodsky Quartet
Went to this concert at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland; a very affecting work which I shall have to listen to more. The third movement in particular was harrowing. For some reason I've always thought of quartets as being, not 'light' music but, perhaps, 'happier' music - because I associate it with groups of friends playing in a domestic situation? This quartet certainly disabused me of that idea!
If you missed it this lunchtime you should catch it on iPlayer.
There are two more concerts featuring Tchaikovsky on Thursday & Friday.
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amateur51
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I enjoyed the performance of the Tchaikovsky quartet with its impressive slow movement - a work in an unusual key. I admire all Tchaikovsky's quartets and feel they are not performed or broadcast as frequently as, say, those of Dvorak or Schumann yet certainly hold their own against the latter (though this was not the opinion of Harriet Smith who IIRC dismissed the quartets some years back on CD Review as written too orchestrally and with inadequate counterpoint ).
Thanks for alerting me to this broadcast.
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I hope to be in the Stevenson Hall for tomorrow's concert, featuring Tchaikovsky's a minor Trio for piano & strings. I'm on a bit of a Tchaikovsky run at the moment, & listening to more piano. Partly prompted by the girlfriend of my partner's son, who's a pianist & intending to do a PhD on Russian composers.
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