It's probably because there isn't much British guitar music.
Record Review: non-BaL discs reviewed, etc.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostIt's probably because there isn't much British guitar music.
Including RIchard Barrett apparently.
I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View Post
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Originally posted by teamsaint View Post
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostIt's probably because there isn't much British guitar music.
????????????
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Richard Tarleton
That Tennstedt Walkure Act 1 - crikey! I couldn't order it fast enough. Glorious voices (I haven't heard a ringing heldentenor like that since S. Jerusalem - I missed my chance to see Kollo live through illness (his) ). And John Tom as Hunding!
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10.45am
Kate Bolton-Porciatti joins Andrew to discuss an eclectic array of recent Early Music releases including Cello concertos by CPE Bach, Caldara Cervantes operas, and Telemann Fantasies
Apologies for this double posting and I am aware that music of Telemann and Caldara isn’t exactly a major interest on these forum but I think the reviewer on this slot, Kate Bolton-Porciatti, deserves a wider audience.
She was calm (none of those Yeah, yeah, yeah. Absolutely! Exactly!! etc.) and sounded completely dependable. I found her descriptions and explanations precise and her use of technical terms considerate. More than anything else, I found her talk most interesting. Andrew sounded like a student asking well prepared (I am sure they really were) questions at his tutorial.
Here she is (scroll down a bit)
Maybe a Telemann BaL by Ms Bolton-Porciatti one day?
(I suppose to some members she might sound uninvolved. Ah well.)Last edited by doversoul1; 08-10-16, 13:11.
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Originally posted by doversoul1 View Post10.45am
Kate Bolton-Porciatti joins Andrew to discuss an eclectic array of recent Early Music releases including Cello concertos by CPE Bach, Caldara Cervantes operas, and Telemann Fantasies
Apologies for this double posting and I am aware that music of Telemann and Caldara isn’t exactly a major interest on these forum but I think the reviewer on this slot, Kate Bolton-Porciatti, deserves a wider audience.
She was calm (none of those Yeah, yeah, yeah. Absolutely! Exactly!! etc.) and sounded completely dependable. I found her descriptions and explanations precise and her use of technical terms considerate. More than anything else, I found her talk most interesting. Andrew sounded like a student asking well prepared (I am sure they really were) questions at his tutorial.
Here she is (scroll down a bit)
Maybe a Telemann BaL by Ms Bolton-Porciatti one day?
(I suppose to some members she might sound uninvolved. Ah well.)
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostThat Tennstedt Walkure Act 1 - crikey! I couldn't order it fast enough. Glorious voices (I haven't heard a ringing heldentenor like that since S. Jerusalem - I missed my chance to see Kollo live through illness (his) ). And John Tom as Hunding!"...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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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Caliban View PostYes! I had the benefit of listening to the disc a couple of months back on Laurie Watt's earth-shaking speakers - absolutely electrifying, and wonderful singing as well as playing.... Eva-Marie Bundschuh was a new name to me - I think, looking at the booklet, she was a singer in East Germany as it then was, whom Klaus T must have known but who had less of a profile in 'the west'...
John Tomlinson on his original home turf - there's a nice interview with him on the Barenboim Ring DVDs saying that when DB asked him to do Wotan he thought DB was making a mistake, he (JT) was a natural Hunding or Hagen, DB wanted a bass-baritone like James Morris...but Barenboim insisted he was exactly what he wanted, and the rest is history. Nice to have his Hunding, alongside the menory of his Hagen in the last ROH ring.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostJohn Tomlinson on his original home turf - there's a nice interview with him on the Barenboim Ring DVDs saying that when DB asked him to do Wotan he thought DB was making a mistake, he (JT) was a natural Hunding or Hagen, DB wanted a bass-baritone like James Morris...but Barenboim insisted he was exactly what he wanted, and the rest is history. Nice to have his Hunding, alongside the menory of his Hagen in the last ROH ring.
Many thanks for the recommendations for the new CD. Looks like another one for the collection![FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostMs Bundschuh also appears (as Gutrune) on that Barenboim/Kupfer Ring set
Many thanks for the recommendations for the new CD. Looks like another one for the collection!
I'd forgotten I also have another John Tom Hunding - a live recording with Domingo and Polaski under Barenboim with Statskapelle Berlin (on Teldec 3984-23294-2).
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Did anyone hear the first item on this morning's Record Review about a new CD of Brahms, Bach, Schumann et al with Itzhak Perlman and Martha Argerich? What little I heard (from Brahms' contribution to the F-A-E Sonata) was stunning and showed that Martha's vitality, vibrancy and electricity as well as sensitivity and imagination remain as much in evidence now that she's 75 (can she really be that?) as when she first burst onto the piano scene around 1960 or so - but Andrew McG referred (as though positively) to a "growling" sound in the lowest octave of the piano and wasn't it sickeningly just! What a recorded let-down to have this thuddy, muddy indistinct sound from a pianist especially iknown for her razor-sharp clarity! I have no idea how it was recorded although I suspect that the piano lid was on short stick, although even that unfortuate circumstance alone could surely not have produced this clodhopping sound that must be entirely unakin to what the pianist actually produced? Mon Dieu!
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