Originally posted by Pulcinella
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Prince of the Pagodas (Hallé 2CD)
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View Post
I think Britten's subversive side was called Peter Pears. Without the singer's encouragement, I wonder how many of the projects you (fairly) cite would have taken off?
As for masks, I find that they're there in Britten's music as much as his personality, to the extent that the idea of a "real Britten" somewhere under the masks is difficult to sustain. In truth, we are all of us a repository of masks, which is what makes Identity such an elusive, slippery and dangerous (even harmful) theory.
Yes we all have masks and conceal parts of ourselves (and thank God for that). Even the American habit pouring your heart out about your “ true “ self is just another tactical concealment. Were you to suggest that their perception of themselves might not tally with others they’d be flummoxed.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View Post
Although he didn't visit Bali until 1956, when preparing for The Prince of the Pagodas, his friendship with Colin McPhee dated back to 1939, so he certainly knew something about Balian music at the time he was writing his second opera. What Sunday morning shows, perhaps, is that bell-ringing is much the same the world over. Those wonderful Britten bells are certainly quite as much Blythburgh as Bali.
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Originally posted by oliver sudden View Post
David Matthews’s article on Act II Scene 1 in the Cambridge Opera Handbook on Peter Grimes points out that Britten recorded a McPhee transcription for two pianos of Balinese music with McPhee while he was in the US, and back in England performed it with Curzon at the time he was writing Grimes. The harmonic resemblance is striking. (Whether there is any programmatic meaning intended, I don’t know.)
It would certainly be unwise (as you hint) to read any sophisticated dramatic/theatrical "meaning" into any such correspondences, given the English setting and cultural mores of the scene in Peter Grimes. It's a different matter in the ballet, and the late opera, of course, where "otherworldliness" in contrast to Western tropes (e.g. the King of the West's Schoenberg parody in Prince of the Pagodas) is the whole point of the Balinese-style music.
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Originally posted by oliver sudden View Post
I love the Balinese elements in Tippett's Triple Concerto.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostHaven't heard but gets a very good review in this month's Gramophone.
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Originally posted by bluestateprommer View Post
David Hurwitz praises this new recording of TPotP at this video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NDO9pGX0b8E
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Originally posted by oliver sudden View Post
Even a broken clock is right twice a day.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Postif time is a continuous flow
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chrono...it%20of%20time.
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Visual representation of a clock. Usually manages to be in the correct minute, but I wouldn't set seconds on my watch to it........
Онлайн часы из досок и палок, строятся для Вас в реальном времени. Можно смотреть бесконечно на огонь, на воду, и на то, как другие работают. Автор идеи Mark Formanek.
(I have dropped in on this site now and then, over a few years now....)
It uses "Standard Time" - there are various web pages about it, including:
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post
... what grounds do you have for assuming time is a continuous flow?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chronon#:~:text=A%20chronon%20is%20a%20proposed,no n%2Ddecomposable%20unit%20of%20time.
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I liked the Halle’s account of the Prince of Pagodas suite thst Colin Matthews has arranged in their Radio 3 in concert a few weeks back still on sounds . Was not so sure about the Mahler 1 - a bit of a curate’s egg, started well but the funeral March was undercharacterised for my liking - the finale began clunkily but ended really well . The conductor seemed much happier in the tender quieter passages to my ears.
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