Originally posted by edashtav
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Saturday 26/10/13 - Poulenc, Ravel, Roussel (BBCSO/Minkowski)
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Originally posted by Oliver View PostThree of my French favourites in one concert. The slow movement of the Poulenc transports me to the banks of the Seine on a misty November late afternoon. A better work than the Piano Concerto, I'd suggest; its wistfulness is quintessentially French. Uniquely Poulencesque (sic)."...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 mercia View Postwould it be blasphemous to say I think I prefer the Goose Suite to the full ballet ? In the full ballet you don't get the magical key change from Beast to Garden which for me is the musical equivalent of sinking into a feather bed
this thread has been infected with purple prose
I was thinking last night how good it was to have that lovely transition; but please don't let me stop you tumbling onto your feather bed, mercs!"...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 mercia View Postwould it be blasphemous to say I think I prefer the Goose Suite to the full ballet ? In the full ballet you don't get the magical key change from Beast to Garden which for me is the musical equivalent of sinking into a feather bed
this thread has been infected with purple prose
Wasn't the Suite the original version (transcribed from the Piano Duet) with the accretions added for the choreographed version?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostWasn't the Suite the original version (transcribed from the Piano Duet) with the accretions added for the choreographed version?"...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 ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI share your blasphemical opinion and will stand with you as they throw the stones.
Wasn't the Suite the original version (transcribed from the Piano Duet) with the accretions added for the choreographed version?
Sorry, this post is redundant - I hadn't noted Caliban's thumbs up.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI share your blasphemical opinion and will stand with you as they throw the stones.
Wasn't the Suite the original version (transcribed from the Piano Duet) with the accretions added for the choreographed version?
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Originally posted by gedsmk View PostI heard the CBSO with Rattle do the "Garden" section ..... I can still remember the physical thrill of the final chord
"...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 jayne lee wilson View PostMinkowski got the BBC SO to play the Poulenc 2-Piano Concerto with truly Parisian gay abandon. Shades of! Etc. Exactly the right blend of tongue-in-cheek romance and clownish drama. The young soloists also did well, but were a little too respectful; I wanted more cod-melodramatic operatics - to sauce it up a little, as Sweet Sue might have said.
But they were warmly expressive and brought the 1st movement gamelan-episode off beautifully.
The two pianists excelled, I felt, in the slow movement. It was played with grace and affection leaving the orchestra to provide the chortles & snorts that stop the movement from being mere Mozartian pastiche. I enjoyed the manner in which Minkowski layered the balance, ensuring that foreground did not occlude background. Elsewhere, I think, that you were right,Jayne, thye two young soloists could have taken more risks.
The finale was carefree: a short trip in a fast machine around the fairs, circuses and dives of pre-War Paris. As always with Poulenc, there was a sentimental moment at the heart of things, quickly subsumed in the tide of humanity out for good time.
Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostYes, a gorgeous, sensuous, smoothly-contoured Mother Goose. I think those prominent winds were emphasised by Minkowski, with a magically apt sharpness and sparkle.
In the Roussel 3rd, Minkowski produced a cooler and more percussive sonority - it didn't sound like Ravel or Poulenc - good. Terrific weight and impact in the allegro vivo but with space to breathe and relax in the lyrical episodes, not too relentless. Impressive textural clarity again. The BBCSO strings were both elegant and ardent as they sung out the adagio, and the tempi changes were well judged with a brilliant colorific contrast in the fast central episode; but the trumpets failed to cut through and crown the climax here, only managing this in the 2nd climax before the movement's end. The brasses were strikingly sharp, lean, almost nasal - a properly French sound, not too full or rounded.
Minor slips aside the last two movements again balanced weight with clarity, and the violin solo, reflecting upon the motto at the finale's heart, was beautifully done; but Minkowski didn't create quite enough tension as we approached the coda, and rushed one or two phrases within it, slightly lessening its impact.
Albert Roussel’s music is sturdy, logical, and well-constructed. I admire his 3rd Symphony, but I hadn’t realised before this decent performance how much Prokofiev Albert had absorbed in the 1920s. Had Petroc announced that the 3rd Symphony, left in sketch form by its composer, had been realised by Prokofiev, I might have believed him!
In concert-planning I found it to be a contrast to the earlier Poulenc rather than complementary to it, but I did feel a little link in the finale when the main theme is surprisingly “cheap” by Roussel’s standards and might be characterised as by Poulenc out of Berlioz.
I didn’t feel that Minkowski’s performance of this symphony was quite on a par with what had gone earlier. Perhaps, rehearsal time had been a bit tight. One or two gear changes were not completed smoothly. Nevertheless, an adequate performance to end an enterprising programme delivered with love and understanding. I thought the BBC SO had been away on a tour of the Middle & Far East. After these performances, I wondered if that some of them had jumped ship in Paris to join a Gallic boot camp run by Marc Minkowski.
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Originally posted by Caliban View PostI also heard SR/CBSO perform it, in London (RFH I think so not quite such a wondrous acoustic), but I too remember the visceral effect of that conclusion, whirling, shimmering, glittering percussion and glowing strings... Got to hand it to S'Simon - he got something out of it that most others don't reach, I haven't heard its like since: it's one of those moments one always wants to try and recapture....
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Originally posted by edashtav View PostI hadn’t realised before this decent performance how much Prokofiev Albert had absorbed in the 1920s.
Suite for piano in F sharp minor, Op. 14 (1909-10)I. PréludeII. SicilienneIII. BourréeIV. RondeA work for solo piano by French composer Albert Roussel (1869-...
The modernism and independence of these pieces for a French composer at that point in time is striking.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostFunny you should say that; I'm pretty sure the original influence went the other way, from having listened to the Suite Op 14 of 1909: a work which looks forward to the Prokofiev and the Roussel of the 1920s and way beyond, beyond the impressionism of "Le Festin" of 1912:
Suite for piano in F sharp minor, Op. 14 (1909-10)I. PréludeII. SicilienneIII. BourréeIV. RondeA work for solo piano by French composer Albert Roussel (1869-...
The modernism and independence of these pieces for a French composer at that point in time is striking.
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Originally posted by gedsmk View PostI heard the CBSO with Rattle do the "Garden" section as an encore in Boston Symphony Hall in 1991 (I think). It was a "coals to Newcastle" moment because in those days the BSO were thought to have the finest string section in the USA. I can still remember the physical thrill of the final chord in that wondrous acoustic.
The BSO returned the compliment in one of their all-too-infrequent appearances this side of the pond in at the Proms in 2001, when they gave the complete "Daphnis" under Haitink, with the Tanglewood chorus. The Boston Symphony were THE French orchestra for many years under Charles Munch, of course - a pedigree going back to the early 20th-cent & Pierre Monteux.The miraculous refinement of their playing under BH at that Prom has stayed with me ever since.
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Originally posted by mercia View Postwould it be blasphemous to say I think I prefer the Goose Suite to the full ballet ? In the full ballet you don't get the magical key change from Beast to Garden which for me is the musical equivalent of sinking into a feather bed
However, I will happily agree that the BBC SO should engage Marc Minkowski regularly. I remember (even this long after the event) that MM mentioned that he had guested with the BBC SO twice prior, which obviously made this concert his 3rd guest appearance with them. I don't doubt, based on the quality of this concert, that a 4th guest appearance will be in the works down the line.
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