Originally posted by jayne lee wilson
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HIP-influenced recordings on modern instruments
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostRef #10 condemning of those who disagree with you? Whether you mean to or not you do appear rather intolerant of those who do not share your views on the new ‘boys or girls’ on the rostrum whose new interpretations are the best yet.
Your reductio in #8 above, and your own and other hyperbole here....
..which as you see I tried (as so so often...) to answer carefully, with examples...
Your own attempt to contextualise the tempo for Beethoven 9(iii) as a "hippie" characteristic (see #12 above) was also inaccurate, as I exemplified. Not to mention your own intolerant, as yet unexplained accusation of "mindlessness" directed towards.... well, why don't YOU tell US which reviewers, performers or listeners...?
Nor did you clarify who was supposed to have stated, or suggested, that all those great conductors you listed in #14 "all got it wrong".
Exaggeration again, and intolerance of your own.
As for new kids with the best interpretations.... I'm sure Jacobs (see Mozart 39) would be flattered by such a youthful description, but both he and the modern-instrument new kid Richard Tognetti (whose Mozart I also love) have been around for a while now....
And much else besides.
I once tried (just last year IIRC) to describe the history and variety of early pianos in some detail, Grafs to Bosendorfers etc, only to be told that fortepianos sounded like "sparky's magic piano..."
Many others like this over many years.
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But the broader and more interesting point is that "HIPP" whilst an unavoidably useful acronym, isn't as easy to define (or distinguish from "traditional") as we might like to think. Take Thomas Fey: the more closely you listen to his wonderful recordings, the clearer it becomes why he names his two greatest influences as.... Bernstein and Harnoncourt.
So Fey's Haydn or Mendelssohn is "Historically Informed" for sure... but this isn't only about the instruments (a mix of modern/period in Heidelberg) or their manner of address.
I wonder, too, if the shade of Mengelberg (full Symphony Orchestra, Amsterdam 1940) isn't hovering at Adam Fischer's shoulder (Chamber Orchestra, Copenhagen 2016-19) when he conducts Beethoven.Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 15-06-20, 03:43.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostMy ref. to "peremptory dismissal" was (inter alia) to 210 here.....
Your reductio in #8 above, and your own and other hyperbole here....
..which as you see I tried (as so so often...) to answer carefully, with examples...
Your own attempt to contextualise the tempo for Beethoven 9(iii) as a "hippie" characteristic (see #12 above) was also inaccurate, as I exemplified. Not to mention your own intolerant, as yet unexplained accusation of "mindlessness" directed towards.... well, why don't YOU tell US which reviewers, performers or listeners...?
Nor did you clarify who was supposed to have stated, or suggested, that all those great conductors you listed in #14 "all got it wrong".
Exaggeration again, and intolerance of your own.
As for new kids with the best interpretations.... I'm sure Jacobs (see Mozart 39) would be flattered by such a youthful description, but both he and the modern-instrument new kid Richard Tognetti (whose Mozart I also love) have been around for a while now....
And much else besides.
I once tried (just last year IIRC) to describe the history and variety of early pianos in some detail, Grafs to Bosendorfers etc, only to be told that fortepianos sounded like "sparky's magic piano..."
Many others like this over many years.
***
But the broader and more interesting point is that "HIPP" whilst an unavoidably useful acronym, isn't as easy to define (or distinguish from "traditional") as we might like to think. Take Thomas Fey: the more closely you listen to his wonderful recordings, the clearer it becomes why he names his two greatest influences as.... Bernstein and Harnoncourt.
So Fey's Haydn or Mendelssohn is "Historically Informed" for sure... but this isn't only about the instruments (a mix of modern/period in Heidelberg) or their manner of address.
I wonder, too, if the shade of Mengelberg (full Symphony Orchestra, Amsterdam 1940) isn't hovering at Adam Fischer's shoulder (Chamber Orchestra, Copenhagen 2016-19) when he conducts Beethoven.
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Originally posted by verismissimo View PostWhen Rattle took on the BPO, he insisted that he retain his association with the OAE (which had existed since the early days of that orchestra). The results are evident in the changing/changed playing of the Berlin band.
Rattle's performances with the OAE and the BPO of similar repertoire could be vastly different, e.g. in Berlioz.
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Originally posted by silvestrione View PostCould you expand, Veri? I think I know what you mean in their Mozart symphonies, but the recent Beethoven set, which I love, I'm not so sure I see the HIPP influence, but that means little, probably just missing it. At one point I got the impression that the Berliners, and the BPO musical environment, became a little resistant to Rattle's moves in this area, and indeed the BPO Beethoven set does not have the slightly uncomfortable halfway feel of the earlier VPO set …
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Originally posted by verismissimo View PostInteresting … I hadn't made that Berlin/Vienna Beethoven comparison. Nevertheless, Rattle's Berlin Beethoven remains a long way from Furtwangler or Karajan.
(As I said in #17 etc above, the whole concept of HIPPs is far more complex and problematic than it may appear if easy labelling is used...)
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Originally posted by silvestrione View PostCould you expand, Veri? I think I know what you mean in their Mozart symphonies, but the recent Beethoven set, which I love, I'm not so sure I see the HIPP influence, but that means little, probably just missing it. At one point I got the impression that the Berliners, and the BPO musical environment, became a little resistant to Rattle's moves in this area, and indeed the BPO Beethoven set does not have the slightly uncomfortable halfway feel of the earlier VPO set.
Rattle's performances with the OAE and the BPO of similar repertoire could be vastly different, e.g. in Berlioz."I do not approve of anything that tampers with natural ignorance. Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone. The whole theory of modern education is radically unsound. Fortunately in England, at any rate, education produces no effect whatsoever. If it did, it would prove a serious danger to the upper classes, and probably lead to acts of violence in Grosvenor Square."
Lady Bracknell The importance of Being Earnest
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