Originally posted by Pabmusic
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Vaughan Williams: The symphonies
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I picked up a used lp of Boult's Antartica today while browsing at my favorite used lp stores (Val's "Halla" in Oak Park, Il). I hadn't heard it in years. I really like his no nonsense approach, particularly effective in depicting the dry eyed desolation of the finale. The second movement is not quite as playful as Haitink, and no one surpasses Haitink in the glacier episode of III. Was RVW really 80 when he wrote this fantastic music? What an inspiration as I stand on the threshold of my dotage.
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Originally posted by Andrew Slater View PostI downloaded the 'mplive' version of the 1950 recording some time ago - if you navigate to the link you can listen to the first minute of each movement. It's certainly a 'different' performance; the first movement starts very slowly, but eventually picks up momentum. All movements are quite slow and lack the bite of RVW's own performance. Nevertheless, worth a listen.
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostI picked up a used lp of Boult's Antartica today while browsing at my favorite used lp stores (Val's "Halla" in Oak Park, Il). I hadn't heard it in years. I really like his no nonsense approach, particularly effective in depicting the dry eyed desolation of the finale. The second movement is not quite as playful as Haitink, and no one surpasses Haitink in the glacier episode of III. Was RVW really 80 when he wrote this fantastic music? What an inspiration as I stand on the threshold of my dotage.
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View Post...Was RVW really 80 when he wrote this fantastic music?..
This doesn't diminish the achievement, though. Just consider these, all composed after he was 75:
An Oxford Elegy
Fantasia on the 'Old 104th'
Concerto Grosso
The Sons of Light
The Pilgrim's Progress (in its final form)
Sinfonia Antarica
The Old Hundredth
Tuba Concerto
Hodie
Violin Sonata
Symphony No. 8
Epithalamion
Variations for Brass Band
Symphony No. 9
Ten Blake Songs
Four Last Songs
Plus scores for four films and one radio play.Last edited by Pabmusic; 06-01-13, 01:09.
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Originally posted by Parry1912 View PostI've got the Boult (EMI), Handley, Haitink, Previn and Slatkin cycles ...
My favourites:
1. Haitink or Handley
2. Hickox
3. Previn (maybe?)
4. Berglund (or Haitink)
5. Handley or Previn
6. Davis (or Handley)
7. Haitink
8. Haitink
9. Haitink
I have a lot of separate versions, and I think I would more or less agree with your list of preferences above, Parry"...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..."
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Originally posted by Caliban View PostI have the old Boult mono set (in its Belart form - and without the 9th as it was issued before it was written!). And thanks to this thread, I've just discovered I have the Haitink set!! I'd totally forgotten...
I have a lot of separate versions, and I think I would more or less agree with your list of preferences above, Parry
Incidentally, this also explains why Boult makes specific mention of Americans in his short introduction to no. 9 - it was for the American market.
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litpage
Thanks for an interesting thread! I am new to this site and am glad to have found it. You may already know this, but there is an increasingly active VW page on Facebook, founded by the RVW Society.
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Thank you for that link litpage. Iam on facebook so will look that up!!
Thank you Pabmusic for thgat list of woirks that composed after 75!! not a bad one at all.
If anyone doesnt know his Varaiaions for Brass Band, please look it up.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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I'm being picky (I know; yet again) but the works of RVW's final decades aren't remarkable for a man in his 80s - any thirty-year-old would give any of his/her limbs to be able to write a work of the calibre of the 7th, 9th, Pilgrim's Progress or even the 8th Symphony or Tuba Concerto! Mozart, Schubert, Chopin and all the "died-earlies" have perhaps led to the belief that old age somehow equals a falling off of powers. It ain't necessarily so: given good health, creativity can flourish past the centenary mark. (RIP, Elliott Carter)[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI'm being picky (I know; yet again) but the works of RVW's final decades aren't remarkable for a man in his 80s - any thirty-year-old would give any of his/her limbs to be able to write a work of the calibre of the 7th, 9th, Pilgrim's Progress or even the 8th Symphony or Tuba Concerto! Mozart, Schubert, Chopin and all the "died-earlies" have perhaps led to the belief that old age somehow equals a falling off of powers. It ain't necessarily so: given good health, creativity can flourish past the centenary mark. (RIP, Elliott Carter)
I'm hoping to do so myself...I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View PostI'm particularly interested in people like Janacek who really do very little in their early years then suddenly explode with radical creativity on the edge of old age.
I'm hoping to do so myself...[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post.......Mozart, Schubert, Chopin and all the "died-earlies" have perhaps led to the belief that old age somehow equals a falling off of powers. It ain't necessarily so: given good health, creativity can flourish past the centenary mark. (RIP, Elliott Carter)
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