We'll have to agree to differ on this one Roehre (though its not many times we do). I've loathed the work from childhood and my loathing seems to have gotten steadily worse (if that's possible) the older I've got. I just find the material totally and utterly dull. Some of the Waltzes such Kaiserwaltz and Tales from the Vienna Woods I find much more interesting and to my taste. For me though the waltz king has always been Tchaikovsky, infinitely more memorable tunes IMO.
A new low? I actually turned off R3 on the way to work....
Collapse
X
-
Richard Tarleton
There's a barnstorming rendition of Schulz-Evler's "Arabesques on An der schönen, blauen Donau" by Jorge Bolet from his 1974 Carnegie Hall recital on the Great Pianists series - great fun and the sort of thing that would liven the journey to work...Lasts 11.25, so perhaps a bit on the long side for Breakfast
"Tales" has had a couple of outings on R3 lately - a favourite of mine.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Suffolkcoastal View PostWe'll have to agree to differ on this one Roehre (though its not many times we do). I've loathed the work from childhood and my loathing seems to have gotten steadily worse (if that's possible) the older I've got. I just find the material totally and utterly dull. Some of the Waltzes such Kaiserwaltz and Tales from the Vienna Woods I find much more interesting and to my taste. For me though the waltz king has always been Tchaikovsky, infinitely more memorable tunes IMO.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Roehre View PostSC, I'm afraid we disagree here.
The full Blaue Donau score as composed by Johann II (therefore without all the usual cuts, like the intro and the other non-3/4 parts, and then lasting approximately 15 minutes) is a well orchestrated and fine symphonic-poem like work. it is not by chance that Brahms wrote the opening bars of the work onto a fan of one of Stauss' daughters' accompanied by the words "Unfortunately not by Joh.Brahms" ("Leider nicht von Joh.Brahms"). The 2nd Vienna School thought high of its qualities - and made reductions of i.a. this score.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Flosshilde View Post(The sound of rapid back-pedalling)
If it's a 'fine piece of music' & it's just the 'hotch-potch' programming you dislike, why not object to Monetverdi's Beatus Vir being included? It too is a fine piece of music, & programming it is just as 'hotch-potch'.
One of the vitues of 'hotch-potch' programming (the only virtue?) is that if a piece of music is played that you don't like you know that it won't last long & something else that you do like (you hope) will be along soon.
Comment
-
-
Beatus Vir and Blue Danube do at least pass the "Complete Works" test !
"Breakfast" may be a dogs dinner, but it IS just a morning radio show. Personally, just personally mind, an eclectic mix of shorter bits and bobs is fine...just not the same ones over and over and over again.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by kevmusic View Post.....when PT played 'The Blue Danube'. Oh, per-lease!! If it had been Strauss's centenary or something I might possibly have forgiven it.
No - they moan, with lofty disdain, about Blue Danube being played in the morning...
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostYes, quite - and exactly how many of the live evening concerts have you listened to in the past 2 or 3 weeks? Here we are in 2012, Radio 3 live from the concert halls of GB every weekday eve, in webstream sound of a quality beyond all but the finest, long-obsolete less-compressed FM ever offered, and better than most of Europe - - and hardly a soul ever notes their reactions to it on the Performance thread.
No - they moan, with lofty disdain, about Blue Danube being played in the morning...
Comment
-
-
Northender
Originally posted by kevmusic View Post.....when PT played 'The Blue Danube'. Oh, per-lease!! If it had been Strauss's centenary or something I might possibly have forgiven it.
I was fascinated to learn from PT this morning that William Boyce was buried in St Paul's Cathedral after he - Boyce, that is -died (as against.....)
Comment
-
Originally posted by David-G View PostYou do have a point, Jayne!
Comment
-
Comment