Is it just me who found himself laughing out loud at the so far OTT glutinous hyperbole of BAL Critics of the Year as to be going down the other side?
OK, so the Smetana recording was interesting, but as AMcG said quietly, it was just a historical footnote, not a mega-world-shaking apocalypse, but listening to Rob Cowan you'd have thought it changed the course of world history. For me, it is exactly that kind of otiose sentimentality and general wordy guff that makes someone a highly suspect critic - I know full well that that is not a view shared by various critics' fan club. I don't care if such and such knows every jot and tittle of the recording's history, how many other versions of the piece he knows by the same team etc etc, in Salzburg, or Walthamstow Town Hall in 1967 or whenever, or so and so had a cold or missed a bus on the way to the recording but.........
And that kind of painting up of performances became more and more how the OTHERS began to talk as the prog went on as if to compete. The worry too is that frankly that method is becoming more and more prevalent in the way some music critics approach their jobs. Not so much critics as ardent advocates for the record industry.
Maybe I'm way behind on this, but I prefer objectivity, evaluation and not the spieling of suspect special-pleading guff, and I really writhed under the relentless OTT style of this whole broadcast.
OK, so the Smetana recording was interesting, but as AMcG said quietly, it was just a historical footnote, not a mega-world-shaking apocalypse, but listening to Rob Cowan you'd have thought it changed the course of world history. For me, it is exactly that kind of otiose sentimentality and general wordy guff that makes someone a highly suspect critic - I know full well that that is not a view shared by various critics' fan club. I don't care if such and such knows every jot and tittle of the recording's history, how many other versions of the piece he knows by the same team etc etc, in Salzburg, or Walthamstow Town Hall in 1967 or whenever, or so and so had a cold or missed a bus on the way to the recording but.........
And that kind of painting up of performances became more and more how the OTHERS began to talk as the prog went on as if to compete. The worry too is that frankly that method is becoming more and more prevalent in the way some music critics approach their jobs. Not so much critics as ardent advocates for the record industry.
Maybe I'm way behind on this, but I prefer objectivity, evaluation and not the spieling of suspect special-pleading guff, and I really writhed under the relentless OTT style of this whole broadcast.
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