It does something to my blood-pressure when yet another of JSB's inimitable organ works is served up by Rob in a GHASTLY Stokowski version. Whilst LS was a fine conductor and formed his own orchestra, etc, etc, he was IMO a TERRIBLE orchestrator and he reduces Bach's glorious textures to MUD, MUD, inglorious MUD. As for the big Rit at the end, well I pressed the 'off' button with a few chords left to run....has it finished yet?
Stokowski's Bach AGAIN
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I enjoyed it (at least mildly) as I sped to work in my rattly old car. Perhaps I would have loathed it on the home hifi, but probably not. I'm not clever enough to mind Stoky's orchestrations, and absolutely adored the Respighi one of BWV582 at last year's Proms. Should I retire behind sofa, or just sink into the eternal darkness ardcarp?I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View PostI enjoyed it (at least mildly) as I sped to work in my rattly old car. Perhaps I would have loathed it on the home hifi, but probably not. I'm not clever enough to mind Stoky's orchestrations, and absolutely adored the Respighi one of BWV582 at last year's Proms. Should I retire behind sofa, or just sink into the eternal darkness ardcarp?
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by ardcarp View PostAs for the big Rit at the end, well I pressed the 'off' button with a few chords left to run....has it finished yet?
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I have to say I agree with the original poster. I love Bach re-scored for orchestra - the Passacaglia and Fugue in C minor reworked by Respighi, Elgar's transcription of the Fantasia and Fugue in C minor and above all, Schoenberg's phenomenal version of the 'St Anne' Prelude and Fugue BWV552 are among my favourites, for example (all done terrific justice by the BBC Phil under Slatkin on Chandos ). Compared with them, the Stokowski versions are lumpen and banal. Like aardcarp I can't stand to listen to them."...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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arcades
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostI too am not clever enough to mind. If fact I'm dim enough to actually go out and buy recordings of them. Far from muddying the texture, the use of orchestral instruments can clarify the lines and counterpoint. But I say this as an orchestrator and not as a scholar/purist.
I'm not sure either sounds very likely to me, but it's an interesting idea. Presumably you'd be happy for someone to re-orchestrate to include electronics/amplification a Richard Strauss tone poem, on the grounds that it makes it possible to hear individual lines within the composition more clearly and adds up to a more impressive overall effect? :)
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Originally posted by arcades View PostI don't think I follow that, EA. Are you saying Bach was an incompetent composer whose "lines and counterpoint" lack clarity and require orchestral or other transcription to put them right? Or that Bach was hampered by the lack of a Romantic/early C20 symphony orchestra to write for and had to make do with what was to hand?
I'm not sure either sounds very likely to me, but it's an interesting idea. Presumably you'd be happy for someone to re-orchestrate to include electronics/amplification a Richard Strauss tone poem, on the grounds that it makes it possible to hear individual lines within the composition more clearly and adds up to a more impressive overall effect? :)
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arcades
Thanks EA :). It sometimes seems, in these conversations, as if older music (Bach) is regarded as wonderful in intention but sadly lacking in realisation (or: he only had absurd instruments like the harpsichord not a Steinway); so it's not only OK but positively a kindness to ignore Bach's instrumentation to make the stuff sound proper. Approaches to later music aren't generally so free. Perhaps it's felt that Strauss had all the materials at his disposal and Bach didn't?
Transcription is another thing, of course. The two sometimes seem to shade into one another, though: as if help is needed to turn the proto-music into real music. I do realise this is ground that has been covered before!
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Originally posted by arcades View PostThanks EA :). It sometimes seems, in these conversations, as if older music (Bach) is regarded as wonderful in intention but sadly lacking in realisation (or: he only had absurd instruments like the harpsichord not a Steinway); so it's not only OK but positively a kindness to ignore Bach's instrumentation to make the stuff sound proper. Approaches to later music aren't generally so free. Perhaps it's felt that Strauss had all the materials at his disposal and Bach didn't?
Transcription is another thing, of course. The two sometimes seem to shade into one another, though: as if help is needed to turn the proto-music into real music. I do realise this is ground that has been covered before!
It's quite interesting, I think, that the climate changed quite quickly, and by the 1940s it was unusual to find such transcriptions (except with Stokowski, of course) and this may be connected as much with the growth of broadcasting and recording, as with anything else. People could now hear Bach played on an organ. But this shouldn't diminish our admiration for the great transcriptions, which were creative labours of love and deep respect in most cases (Elgar even gave his an opus number).
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True. Even in the 1960s, when I was at a boarding school, a musical friend and I would spend our evenings in the practice rooms, playing piano duet arrangements of Beethoven, Mozart and Haydn symphonies until we knew them inside-out. Of course, recordings and broadcasts were available by then but this did not diminish the value of the experience.
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Roehre
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I've come over as some sort of dreadful Bach purist! Oh dear. I've always thought that Bach works well played on almost anything, swung by Swingles, digitised...almost anything in fact...except muddied by Stokowski. I agree with a previous poster that many Bach orchestral transcriptions work well. One of the most moving experiences was to hear 'Jesu Joy' played by a handful of kids under 11 on violin, flute, electric bass guitar and chime bars.
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