Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben
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Essential Classics - The Continuing Debate
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View Post
Snap! Who'd have thought that this particular conductor could take the direct line to Nicolai's lovely overture so perfectly? It was terrific!
He has massively raised the cultural tone …
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
Also enjoying the Paterson Joseph Shakespeare snippets who is reading them very well for radio.
He has massively raised the cultural tone …
I had the great pleasure of seeing her father giving his Chauvelin in The Elusive Pimpernel at BFI last Saturday - I'd never caught this almost forgotten 1950s Powell and Pressburger epic before. Relevant in a sense, because Cyril Cusack plays the Machiavellian villain as a sort of homage to Olivier's Richard III. Marvellously so.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View Post
Yes, he was very good indeed - more impressive (for me) than Sinead Cusack, who's taken over for the afternoon stint. Too much of the actresses, actressy (but that's a personal opinion).
I had the great pleasure of seeing her father giving his Chauvelin in The Elusive Pimpernel at BFI last Saturday - I'd never caught this almost forgotten 1950s Powell and Pressburger epic before. Relevant in a sense, because Cyril Cusack plays the Machiavellian villain as a sort of homage to Olivier's Richard III. Marvellously so.
Actresses talking about themselves …who would credit it?
PS She did Macbeth ( Tomorrow etc ) v well. Though I couldn’t resist joining in giving it the full Olivier obvs…Last edited by Ein Heldenleben; 08-11-23, 16:37.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostSnap! Who'd have thought that this particular conductor could take the direct line to Nicolai's lovely overture so perfectly? It was terrific!
Presumably the performance was taken from that concert - I just dipped into EC to hear: there was applause but no mention of the concert in the intro/outro… (To add a negative note, hearing Georgia Mann’s presentation reminded me why I never listen to this programme: quite apart from anything else, she quite evidently thought the composer’s name was - first name, surname - “Nicolai Otto”… )"...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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They’ve just played this in the song of the day slot. I’ve never heard Lisitsian before . What a beautiful voice with a wonderful plaintive core in the heart of it .There’s only sketchy info on him in Wiki . He didn’t sing much in the West just a solitary perf at the Met . Any other recording recommendations welcome !Yeletsky's Aria: I Love You - Pavel Lisitsian With The Orchestra Of The Bolshoi Theatre Conducted By Alexander Melik-Pashaev
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....Very taken with a sequence of works #22/#23/#24 this morning [28.11.23] starting with an orchestral version of Franz Schubert
Im Abendrot D.799 with a marvellous male singer who's name I did not catch (i was driving).....
....Ed: Benjamin Appl ....so good I'm sure you will have heard about it (https://www.gramophone.co.uk/review/...chubert-lieder)
Last edited by eighthobstruction; 28-11-23, 17:22.bong ching
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Originally posted by cria View PostAppl is wonderful - he sings a glorious Winterreise acted out in snowy Alpine conditions. The film is on iPlayer for a couple more months.
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Originally posted by cria View PostAppl is wonderful - he sings a glorious Winterreise acted out in snowy Alpine conditions. The film is on iPlayer for a couple more months.
Long article here. I didn't realise James Baillieu comes from South Africa. He hadn't encountered snow or its effect on the landscape until he was in his 20s, which made Winterreise more of a challenge, in his mind.
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