Originally posted by Old Grumpy
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How Unbiased Is The Criticism on CD Review
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VodkaDilc
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Originally posted by VodkaDilc View PostIRR has some outstanding contributors: Nicholas Anderson, Simon Heighes, Robert Layton, Marc Rochester, John Warrack, Robert Matthew-Walker to name just the first six who spring to mind. And, more importantly, they are given the space to review in depth.
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amateur51
Originally posted by VodkaDilc View PostWhy? He's unsurpassed on Bernstein, Mahler and others.
Saucer of milk anyone?
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amateur51
Originally posted by Old Grumpy View PostCan there be such a thing as unbiased criticism? After all any criticism is, by its very nature, one person's opinion. I mainly buy CDs in the jazz genre (so not featured on CD review). I think reviews on Amazon are helpful, as are those in the Guardian. Opinion on this forum is also informative. If the music can be sampled online/on air before purchase, then that is an added bonus. After time one learns which critics opinions are similar to one's own.
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Originally posted by Alison View PostThere was a time when Rattle was seemingly beyond criticism in the pages of Gramophone.
It was almost embarrassing. Well done to whoever bucked that trend first.
Now I am waiting to see who is brave enough to criticise Nicola Benedetti !
I feel some critics are lemmings ... so it only takes one ....
In Berlin, the character & history of the orchestra makes it harder for ANYONE to make an impact or form a partnership, Rattle himself says it took 5 years or more, and recordings aren't helped by the latterday favouring of the Philharmonie as a venue instead of the acoustically superior ChristusKirche. So the discography has been a bit patchy, the readings on disc less consistently compelling. But anyone attending the DCH online has heard any number of great performances from him - not least the Haydn 95/Beethoven 7 a few weeks ago, with an excellent Jorg Widmann premiere.Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 08-10-12, 01:41.
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Originally posted by Thropplenoggin View PostA recent thread by ardcarp in which he laments the lack of disagreement on CD Review when you McGregor discusses new releases with a guest commentator struck a chord (a Neapolitan sixth, no less).
I've often wondered how reliable the criticism is on CD Review. A recent instance was the gushing over home-grown talent like Paul Lewis. I can't imagine a release by Paul Lewis ever being given a detached critique. A frequent bugbear of Amazon.com reviewers is how Gramophone automatically lavishes praise on new releases by English conductors - JEG being, perhaps, the most notable. I'm often minded of Private Eye's yearly 'log-rolling' issue, in which they list the links between puffs by authors in their 'Book of the Year' lists and publishing houses, agents, friends, etc.
Another noticeable facet of BaL is how often the same names crop up again and again as the first choice. Scrolling through this list, you see the same names cropping up for wildly differing repertoire. You can watch trends emerging, how HIP names become hip, with Harnoncourt, Norrington and JEG immediately apparent. What strikes me is how can one conductor - and I'm thinking here of JEG - be the first choice for so many different musical genres: Early Baroque and Late Romantic, say?
There was an article stating that Amazon reviews are just as "reliable" a source of criticism as newspaper and magazines (not difficult when you see the paltry three lines that makes up a Guardian classical CD review!). Although the star system can be 'gamed' - by authors (see the Orlando Figes debacle), record labels, etc. or lunatics like this crétin des Alpes with his 'communiques from the Bach front', frothing at the mouth with 1-star on every JEG release - I have found some very balanced and in-depth reviews on Amazon.
For me, the beauty of the Internet is skipping around and reading a range of different opinions hither and thither and, best of all, using Spotify to sample for myself (assuming its available on there - Harmonia Mundi aren't).
So, what criticism do you find reliable and/or suitably detached from bias, commercial interest, etc.?
Other music review magazines have their biases as well. Fanfare tends to assign all recordings of a certain composer to the same reviewer. Thieir Bruckner reviewer is very knowledgable but he can't abide Jochum, who happens to be my second favorite Bruckner interpreter (after Furtwangler). I therefore ignore his recommendations but enjoy reading him all the same. Fanfare also will frequently assign the same disc to tow reviewers, who reach completely different conclusions.
I completely agree that a service which lets you listen to extended excerpts is the best way to proceed and that you should form your own opinion. Ideally, a service would let you listen to a whole disc one time in some type of non-recordable format. I don't think that will ever happen.
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[QUOTE=
I've often wondered how reliable the criticism is on CD Review. A recent instance was the gushing over home-grown talent like Paul Lewis. I can't imagine a release by Paul Lewis ever being given a detached critique. [/QUOTE]
I haven't heard many Lewis recordings, but for what it is worth, he is an artist who is very much admired here in France. But then, he does get a lot of promotion from French Harmonia Mundi, for whom he records.
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I think that "unbiased" in the heading is the wrong word. It should be "how uninfluenced" because we all have our own personal experiences which will influence our reactions, but the programme presenters' comments should be regarded as preferences rather than critiques.
This problem is one of the reasons why I do not bother to listen to this type of programme. It is the decision as to what should be included in the revue.
Who decides? Is it the Presenter? The Producer? It is impossible to guarantee that all available recordings are included, so maybe the bias (or prejudice) starts there.
And who decides how much time is given to each extract? I believe that the whole format makes it impossible for the listeners to decide for themselves which version of a performance they are going to buy - and that is surely the reason for broadcasting the programme in the first place, isn't it?.
HS
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amateur51
Originally posted by Hornspieler View PostI think that "unbiased" in the heading is the wrong word. It should be "how uninfluenced" because we all have our own personal experiences which will influence our reactions, but the programme presenters' comments should be regarded as preferences rather than critiques.
This problem is one of the reasons why I do not bother to listen to this type of programme. It is the decision as to what should be included in the revue.
Who decides? Is it the Presenter? The Producer? It is impossible to guarantee that all available recordings are included, so maybe the bias (or prejudice) starts there.
And who decides how much time is given to each extract? I believe that the whole format makes it impossible for the listeners to decide for themselves which version of a performance they are going to buy - and that is surely the reason for broadcasting the programme in the first place, isn't it?.
HS
I like richardfinegold's observation that Fanfare sometimes gets two people to write reviews of the same disc but I can see that becoming a muddle sometimes too.
When you come down to it, you take a punt and hope for the best. I'll be forever grateful to Trevor Harvey in Gramophone in the 70s I think pointing me towards the recording of Beethoven piano concerto no 5 with Clifford Curzon and VPO/Knappertsbusch. But equally TH will have his detractors for equally good reasons.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostRattle formed a special partnership with the CBSO, creating a string of outstanding recordings - Prokofiev 5, Henze 7, Turangalila, Mahler 4&7, some highly accomplished Walton, Ravel, Debussy and Stravinsky, Bartok Cto. for Orchestra and Piano Ctos, and a pair of outstanding Haydn Symphony discs (60,70,90 & 22, 86, 102) which latter I've returned to often with huge pleasure. Marvellous concerts too, frequently relayed on R3. And he did all of this with an out-of-favour provincial orchestra. Got a rather good concert hall built as well. Some of that Gramophone praise might just have been deserved, surely.
In Berlin, the character & history of the orchestra makes it harder for ANYONE to make an impact or form a partnership, Rattle himself says it took 5 years or more, and recordings aren't helped by the latterday favouring of the Philharmonie as a venue instead of the acoustically superior ChristusKirche. So the discography has been a bit patchy, the readings on disc less consistently compelling. But anyone attending the DCH online has heard any number of great performances from him - not least the Haydn 95/Beethoven 7 a few weeks ago, with an excellent Jorg Widmann premiere.
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amateur51
Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostRattle formed a special partnership with the CBSO, creating a string of outstanding recordings - Prokofiev 5, Henze 7, Turangalila, Mahler 4&7, some highly accomplished Walton, Ravel, Debussy and Stravinsky, Bartok Cto. for Orchestra and Piano Ctos, and a pair of outstanding Haydn Symphony discs (60,70,90 & 22, 86, 102) which latter I've returned to often with huge pleasure. Marvellous concerts too, frequently relayed on R3. And he did all of this with an out-of-favour provincial orchestra. Got a rather good concert hall built as well. Some of that Gramophone praise might just have been deserved, surely.
In Berlin, the character & history of the orchestra makes it harder for ANYONE to make an impact or form a partnership, Rattle himself says it took 5 years or more, and recordings aren't helped by the latterday favouring of the Philharmonie as a venue instead of the acoustically superior ChristusKirche. So the discography has been a bit patchy, the readings on disc less consistently compelling. But anyone attending the DCH online has heard any number of great performances from him - not least the Haydn 95/Beethoven 7 a few weeks ago, with an excellent Jorg Widmann premiere.
One Sunday aeons ago, word got around that Rattle was 'doing' a and rarely performed score Osud (Fate) by Janáček at London's Queen Elizabeth Hall in the afternoon. I decided to take a punt and was amazed to find a large crowd had gathered & were queuing for tickets. A few years later Rattle took over the South Bank Summer Festival and did some wonderful stuff including Jessye Norman in RStrauss's Four Last Songs, and a complete Sibelius cycle (not so common in those days). A few years further on an here and Michael Viner created the Towards The Millennium series at the Royal Festival Hall in London. Sadly Viner didn't live to see the fruits of their co-operation and it was left to Rattle to inspire a generation I'd say with his thoughtful programming. Berlin's gain was our loss but such is progress.
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Gosh yes! Towards the Millennium!
I discovered Suk's Asrael and Szymanowski's Stabat Mater thanks to that inspired series...Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 08-10-12, 19:09.
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amateur51
Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostGosh yes! Towards the Millennium!
I discovered Suk's Asrael and Szymanowski's Stabat Mater thanks to that inspired series...
Do you subscribe to the BPO concerts? I've been thinking about doing so and a favourable review might tip the balance
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostGosh yes! Towards the Millennium!
I discovered Suk's Asrael and Szymanowski's Stabat Mater thanks to that inspired series..."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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