Originally posted by hmvman
View Post
Sunday Morning
Collapse
X
-
-
-
Originally posted by hmvman View PostClearly the Sunday Morning 'interactive' box hasn't been ticked strongly enough.
Even Zucchini appears to agree that the tweets are uninteresting. Which is interesting.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by doversoul View PostNo, they are not. The whole point of ‘interactive’ is that you become part of the programme by ‘talking to’ the presenter. The concept is entirely individual presenter centred. Whereas the posts on this forum during a concert are more like the posters thinking aloud and nothing to do with becoming part of a radio programme. There are few things that make my heart sink deeper than the word interactive.
I said that some people here do just the same and feel a need to post short and trivial messages when they might also be better off listening to a concert which is in full flow.
I made no comment whatsoever about similarities or differences between messages that are broadcast and messages that are posted here.
(same response applies to fern...)
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Zucchini View PostI said that some people here do just the same and feel a need to post short and trivial messages when they might also be better off listening to a concert which is in full flow.
I don't think that many members tweet their running commentaries during the concert, do they? compared with the number who are online at any given time. One? Two? Three?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Zucchini View PostFor God's sake you've missed the point entirely - hmvman commented that Cowan was "receiving tweets and e-mails from people who might've been better off listening rather than tweeting and e-mailing".
Comment
-
-
Roehre
Originally posted by french frank View Post...
I don't think that many members tweet their running commentaries during the concert, do they? compared with the number who are online at any given time. One? Two? Three?
Comment
-
Originally posted by Roehre View PostI am afraid it's more than that , and not only restricted to R3 concerts (live or otherwise) but also during "listening" to CDs and other media. I fear quite a lot of music is actually heard -used as a kind of background or as part of multitasking, hence not really listened to.
At home, someone might well listen to a single movement, first in one interpretation, then in another; yet if they are settling down to listen for the 'enjoyment' - on a CD or radio - they would hate it.
My '1, 2 or 3?' was referring specifically to people listening to the R3 concerts, since I thought that was what Zucchini was criticising. My impression was that there wasn't that much response on the forum while the R3 concert was on [could be that they weren't listening!]?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Zucchini View PostI said that some people here do just the same and feel a need to post short and trivial messages when they might also be better off listening to a concert which is in full flow.
Comment
-
-
This morning, in a break from the inevitable grovelling for texts, e-mails and tweets, we heard a couple of Mozart piano sonatas (and I mean the complete sonatas). The second of these was the Grieg 2-piano version of K.545, in which Mozart's original is played on piano 1, just as the composer left it, with piano 2 adding some rather wonderful elaborations. Before we climb too high on the horse-of-great-vertical-proportions, Grieg was only doing what Mozart himself had done to Handel's Messiah, and it's great to hear what one great composer can do with another's music.
Of the Grieg arrangements, I think his finest is the one he made of the Mozart Fantasia in C minor, K. 475.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Don Petter View PostThey were both lower price reissue labels. Ace of Clubs in the mono era was a bid by Decca to counter the new record clubs, such as World Record Club (hence the clever name). They used deleted recordings from the full price LXT series.
Ace of Diamonds, the equivalent stereo label, started in 1965, being reissues of deleted full price SXL items.
The latter label did include some new recordings, rather than reissues, later in the 1970s.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostOf the Grieg arrangements, I think his finest is the one he made of the Mozart Fantasia in C minor, K. 475.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
Comment
-
-
judging by the commentary later on concerning Mozart improvising to a blank page for one of his violin sonatas i am pretty certain that Mozart would never have played any piano music the same way twice .... his own or another composer's work .... no matter what huff the Emperor was in ...
and i bet he would have improvised on a third piano to the Grieg arrangement!According to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.
Comment
-
-
Don Petter
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostI've just picked up on this one. The above is accurate, but there was one anomaly: Ansermet's Beethoven 9 was issued on Ace of Clubs in mono, but the complete symphony cycle had been recorded in stereo. When the Ace of Diamonds label was introduced, all 9 symphonies were issued in stereo, with only 1-8 in mono, as the 9th was already on Ace of Clubs.
Comment
-
Richard Tarleton
Something very strange this morning. I switched on during the Woodbird scene from Siegfried, very obviously the Solti with J Sutherland (and W Windgassen), only for RC at the end to say that was his Sunday afternoon listening sorted, that was from Siegfried, with WW and Birgit Nielsen. Puzzled, I went back to the Sunday Times. Shortly afterwards RC said he'd been inundated with emails and tweets pointing out it was the Woodbird scene, and as explanation telling us what it "said on the label". What on earth had he been listening to? Was he listening at all? Had he slipped out of the studio for a comfort break? All very odd.
Actually he's been trying to break the record for number of tweets read out. I'm off for a walk.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostSomething very strange this morning. I switched on during the Woodbird scene from Siegfried, very obviously the Solti with J Sutherland (and W Windgassen), only for RC at the end to say that was his Sunday afternoon listening sorted, that was from Siegfried, with WW and Birgit Nielsen. Puzzled, I went back to the Sunday Times. Shortly afterwards RC said he'd been inundated with emails and tweets pointing out it was the Woodbird scene, and as explanation telling us what it "said on the label". What on earth had he been listening to? Was he listening at all? Had he slipped out of the studio for a comfort break? All very odd.
Actually he's been trying to break the record for number of tweets read out. I'm off for a walk.
Comment
-
Comment