I listen to Ravel often, even Bolero now and again, perhaps once a year, but like so many others I'm heartily sick of it on R3. The absurdity is that the whole piece is of course an enormous crescendo, and the effect is always destroyed by the Optimod compression, but still they go on playing it.
...Music You Simply HAD to turn off?
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Bryn,
I usually listen on FM for convenience, although I do use Freeview regularly when I want to record something on hard disc. I've no need to record Bolero however, since I'm horrified to find that I have 21 versions on CD! I hasten to say that this plethora is mainly due to the more interesting couplings!
Bws.
Ferret
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Originally posted by Caliban View PostTotally with you on 1, 2 and 4
But at 3, in place of Bolero, I'd put most of Liszt's output (save for a handful of his more thoughtful and/or lyrical piano pieces).Best regards,
Jonathan
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Originally posted by Jonathan View PostOk, no wish to be rude but how much of Liszt's output have you actually heard Caliban? - If you want peaceful Liszt, try the Berceuse (especially the early shorter version), much of the late work (especially Die Zelle on Nannonwerth last version, subtitled Elegie) and the chamber music (which sadly gets recorded very rarely). If you would like more advice, please let me know."...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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barber olly
Originally posted by Ferretfancy View PostI've no need to record Bolero however, since I'm horrified to find that I have 21 versions on CD! I hasten to say that this plethora is mainly due to the more interesting couplings!
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rubbernecker
Originally posted by Caliban View PostIt's not rude at all, Jonathan. Actually my upstairs neighbour happens to be one Tamas Vasary (what a waste, I hear you cry), and he has played through a few pieces on my piano to try and convert me - including the Berceuse which I agree is lovely (hence partly the caveat to my message). I can also handle a red-blooded performance of the B minor Sonata. But by and large, and it's not for want of trying I promise you, I can't bear it. A Wigmore Hall recital of the Transcendental Studies was one of my most irritating musical experiences ever (I came within an ace of running from the place). I know Liszt was amazingly influential on the subsequent history of music, but so was Henry Ford on the history of the motor-car, and I wouldn't want to drive everywhere in a Model-T.... *ducks for cover*
I can't muster any enthusiasm for Liszt either. Neither do I imagine the course of western music would have remained much altered had he not swept into town. Wikipedia has only this to say about his legacy:
Although there was a period in which many considered Liszt's works "flashy" or superficial, it is now held that many of Liszt's compositions such as Nuages gris, Les jeux d'eaux a la vill d'Este, etc., which contain parallel fifths, the whole-tone scale, parallel diminished and augmented triads, and unresolved dissonances, anticipated and influenced twentieth century music like that of Debussy, Ravel and Bartok
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Roehre
Originally posted by rubbernecker View PostWikipedia has only this to say about his legacy:
Although there was a period in which many considered Liszt's works "flashy" or superficial, it is now held that many of Liszt's compositions such as Nuages gris, Les jeux d'eaux a la vill d'Este, etc., which contain parallel fifths, the whole-tone scale, parallel diminished and augmented triads, and unresolved dissonances, anticipated and influenced twentieth century music like that of Debussy, Ravel and Bartok
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Freddie Campbell
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Originally posted by Roehre View PostNot mentioning the point that the Tristan-chord is Liszt's, not Wagner's "innovation"
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