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Bach organ works. I shall require the BBC to give me a clear 48 hours air-time...
You didn't enjoy Stephen Farr's 56 minute whirlwind tour on BAL in 2010 then?
Cost me money, that did - I remember we corresponded afterwards about the organ in Saint-Louis-En-L'Ile
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
For me it would be the Harris symphonies, as I have such intimate and detailed knowledge of them and have or have already heard almost all of the available recordings.
Last edited by Suffolkcoastal; 18-11-12, 18:10.
Reason: missed 'heard' out!
For me it would be the Harris symphonies, as I have such intimate and detailed knowledge of them and have or have already almost all of the available recordings.
When I read "having a go at ... " I thought it was the title of a Thread of criticism about recent editions! The problem with the BaL these days is that much of the repertoire has been recorded too many times to fit into a format originating at a time when there were, at most, half-a-dozen available versions of the standard repertoire. To "do", say, Beethoven 9 with its sixty and more available versions in a 45min programme means that either you miss out half-a-dozen recordings that many of the listeners would regard as "the Best", or you spend 45 seconds on each one!
For me it would be the Harris symphonies, as I have such intimate and detailed knowledge of them and have or have already heard almost all of the available recordings.
I'd like to go for the Hartmannsymphonies, those by Hindemith , Melartin or Vermeulen (the latter especially no.2), Stravinsky's Agon, Berio's Sinfonia or Machaut's Messe de Nostre Dame
I'd like to go for the Hartmannsymphonies, those by Hindemith , Melartin or Vermeulen (the latter especially no.2), Stravinsky's Agon, Berio's Sinfonia or Machaut's Messe de Nostre Dame
Well EA would probably be happier with some of those than some of the warhorses !!
I am dipping my toe in the Hindemith waters, so would the "Pittsburgh" is a good place to start?.....alternatively Bartok's Miraculous Mandarin as discussed elsewhere..though Jayne has already pronounced (in a good way !) on that one .
I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
Well EA would probably be happier with some of those than some of the warhorses !!
I am dipping my toe in the Hindemith waters, so would the "Pittsburgh" is a good place to start?.....alternatively Bartok's Miraculous Mandarin as discussed elsewhere..though Jayne has already pronounced (in a good way !) on that one .
Mathis der Maler Symphony is probably a good place to start and there are a number of recordings to choose from, Hindemith's other symphonies haven't had as many recordings. The 'Pittsburgh' Symphony isn't among Hindemith's best works but it is approachable enough. I'm not sure if the Chandos recording of the work is still available, as this would be well worth purchasing as it is coupled with his Symphonic Dances, which are absolutely superb and thorougly recommendable. Why this work isn't heard more often is a total mystery.
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