Originally posted by Roger Webb
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Classical Live is changing its tune
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Originally posted by Roger Webb View Post
My home town of Lewes in Sussex on 5th November a few years ago burnt an effigy of a gypsy instead of the usual one of the Pope....I'm not sure if this shows a softening of attitudes to catholicism or a more xenophobic attitude to outsiders considered 'undesirable'!
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
I lived there for a few years . A great town but I really didn’t like the sectarian nature of those Nov 5th displays. One year a women was handing out anti Catholic leaflets that might have been produced by the UDA at the height of the troubles. One reason why half my family left County Armagh in the thirties.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostThanks for your further thoughts, Master Jaques, particularly about the music, but concernig Delius' idea of the Paradise Garden I still think you're 'interpreting' rather than being 'scrupulously accurate' (your phrase, let's not forget) , which would surely involve an unequivocal mention of the sale of sex and drinks.
(And remember I said "semi-brothel". There's no mention of a Madame here, and the Dark Fiddler hardly acts like a paid pimp. It's much more informal than that.)
Like it or not, Delius regularly dips into the demi-monde, whether in Paris, Switzerland or indeed in the Idyll.Last edited by Master Jacques; 09-01-25, 20:06.
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Originally posted by Roger Webb View Post
I too left Lewes, but when I was ten, so have no strong recollections - although I remember the rolling of tar barrels as the high spot - it seems rather tame now! I watch it a bit on 'Rocket TV' online, and we usually pay a visit for a week later in November. I do love the town though...and so handy for Glyndebourne!
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
I don’t think they burn the pope in effigy any more . It tends to be politicians and notorious celebrities …
Must try and get down for the World Pea Throwing Championships at The Lewes Arms...and a pint of Harvey's, now restored!
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Originally posted by Roger Webb View Post
Yes, I remember Truss, Trump, Farage and I think Vennells put to the flame....what's the betting Elon Musk for this year's!
Must try and get down for the World Pea Throwing Championships at The Lewes Arms...and a pint of Harvey's, now restored!
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
Ah yes - but I had to check the third! - ROMA, which I prefer to "travelling people", many of whom will not be of Roma descent. Interestingly (?) we have a Gipsy Hill and a Gipsy Road near where I live - note the spelling - the first with the railway station which is on it likewise spelt.
Are we allowed nowadays to use the term "tinker", by the way?
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re political correctenss, vinteuil, I corresponded with a Lakota man a few years ago who reassured me it was OK to refer to 'original Americans' as Indians or even Red Indians. I was recently assured by someone who worked with the Afro-Caribbean community in a large English city that 'negro' is still acceptable, and I still hear 'gypsy' in common parlance and see it in print.
As I've said before I find it dificult to keep up with the changes people like to make to my native language . Is a list of recently-become-banned words published in the London Gazette or some other medium which makes them illegal ? I think not. Maybe we can make up our own minds. I wish I could decide that 'incredible', 'yunnow' , and 'kine of' were illegal .
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Originally posted by smittims View PostThanks, Master Jaques. I know I'm a little slow sometimes but but even I feel now that you're starting to tease me!
As I don't go in for that sort of thing, I'll content myself with listening to Delius' music. I have enjoyed our discussion.
For me, Delius is one of the great opera composers, dealing with the depth and breadth of human experience in a special way not quite like any other. I think of him as the musical equivalent of his great friend Munch, whose work of course extends far beyond the extreme of The Scream. Delius presents us with something like the musical equivalent of Munch's masterly Frieze of Life: they share the same concerns, centred firmly on the big things - love, sex and death.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View Post
No teasing - that's not my style, smittims. ............... Delius presents us with something like the musical equivalent of Munch's masterly Frieze of Life: they share the same concerns, centred firmly on the big things - love, sex and death.
This put some steel into his soul....along with the discovery of Nietzsche, and his tough character was set - An Arabesque, Fennimore and Gerda (perhaps the most Munchian!....excepting the happy ending!) and Song of the High Hills (stated quite knowledgeably as representing his Yorkshire upbringing by someone on Radio 3!).
The above will never be the most popular Delius....I holidayed many times in Grez sur Loing, and visited the 'Summer Garden', and love those works associated with that side of this most original of composers...but I'm more intrigued by the side of him shaped by his 'Northern' influences....Glenn Gould's 'The Idea of North', although related to the Canadian wilderness, could equally be applied to those ideals that shaped Delius's personality.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View Post[…]
For me, Delius is one of the great opera composers, dealing with the depth and breadth of human experience in a special way not quite like any other. I think of him as the musical equivalent of his great friend Munch, whose work of course extends far beyond the extreme of The Scream. Delius presents us with something like the musical equivalent of Munch's masterly Frieze of Life: they share the same concerns, centred firmly on the big things - love, sex and death.
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It would be nice to get an opportunity to make a judgment on Delius and opera in live performance wouldnt it ? One might almost conceive of an organisation devoted to the performance of works in English and with British opera composers regularly presented .
I’ve never seen AVRAJ
What’s Koanga like live ? It seems fairly lurid on the page which is a good start. But would it pass the thought police these days ?
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostWhat’s Koanga like live ? It seems fairly lurid on the page which is a good start. But would it pass the thought police these days ?
And here's a review of the Wexford perf.
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