Originally posted by Black Swan
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Critics choice
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Don Petter
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Originally posted by Don Petter View PostI only heard a section in the middle during a car journey, including the Stravinsky Violin Concerto, which I found to have rather too much emphasis on the portamenti for my taste. I then got bogged down with the number of times HS was saying 'kind-of', and found myself waiting for the next occurence rather than listening to what she had to say.
I don't think it's a trivial point: on radio you just can't have distracting mannerisms like that.
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View Postshe has her views (and prejudices) like everyone else
Nevertheless, a spontaneous throwaway comment is understandable if not valid .It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostAny boarders bought the Rite of Spring Anniversary box set?
Listen to unlimited streaming or download Igor Stravinsky : Le Sacre du Printemps (100th Anniversary Collectors Edition) by Various Artists in Hi-Res quality on Qobuz. Subscriptions from $10.83/month.
You can also buy it as a download for 150 Euros.Steve
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Originally posted by french frank View Post'criticism' does not mean saying what you like or don't like. I would expect serious criticism to be balanced so that, if you don't like/get something and if you say so, that should be followed by an alternative view to put your own 'prejudice' into perspective.
On a Christmas round-up, I think it perfectly reasonable for people to be a little less 'critical' and to expose their prejudices: a good proportion of posts on this board would, after all, fall into that latter category.
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Dougie - good post with which I agree up to the point where you say
Originally posted by HighlandDougie View PostOn a Christmas round-up, I think it perfectly reasonable for people to be a little less 'critical' and to expose their prejudices: a good proportion of posts on this board would, after all, fall into that latter category.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View PostAbsolutely - to quote a definition of criticism, "(the) analysis and judgement of the merits and faults of a literary or artistic work". Any credible reviewer on 'Building a Library' should be able to provide such an analysis which, by and large, I find to be the case. That includes Harriet Smith talking about the Brahms 1st Piano Concerto where she made clear her view that it was a young man's work of which performances had become slower and slower over the years, giving it a grandiosity (rather than grandeur) which she felt detracted from its overall impact. Clearly there are many people who don't agree with her view but, having taken the 1930's Backhaus recording as a yardstick (fastish), she then used other slowish recordings (Curzon springs to mind) to illustrate her point. Describing her as, "a cretin", was, though, taking matters a bit far: she may be annoying ('kind of' gets right up my nose too) but she isn't a congenital idiot. That remark was, I think, made by someone who hadn't actually heard the programme which rather begs the question of why they made the comment in the first place.
On a Christmas round-up, I think it perfectly reasonable for people to be a little less 'critical' and to expose their prejudices: a good proportion of posts on this board would, after all, fall into that latter category.
I also found the 'cretin' comment banal (and excessive) for precisely the reasons you give.It loved to happen. -- Marcus Aurelius
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostDougie - good post with which I agree up to the point where you say
... the comments on this Board are not made by people paid by the BBC, nor would they influence a larger readership making choices about which CDs they might purchase. I don't think that the professional critics gathered for the annual round-up should be accorded the luxury of "prejudice" at this of all times.
On re-reading my somewhat crabbit post (apologies, FF) you are quite right. I don't think that anyone should be peddling prejudices, least of all on Radio 3. And I unreservedly withdraw my comments about boarders - prejudices "non", enthusiasms "oui". How else would I have discovered Malipiero and Tcherepnin this year, not to mention Richard Barrett's rather wonderful "Dark Matter". And my journey through jazz (on which I know zilch) shamelessly listening to what Stanfordians has posted as recent listening.
HD
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View PostFHG
How else would I have discovered Malipiero and Tcherepnin this year, not to mention Richard Barrett's rather wonderful "Dark Matter". And my journey through jazz (on which I know zilch) shamelessly listening to what Stanfordians has posted as recent listening.
HD
oh I'm glad its not just me shamelessly plundering other peoples experience and knowledge !!
"Dark Matter" is still something i need to properly get to grips with.
And Malipiero remains stubbornly on the back burner for now, but soon, soon....
(Stan's Jazz recommendations are terrific,for a jazz numpty like me ).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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Harriet Smith's comments about Brahms' symphonies deserved a proper challenge . They may have been heavy and turgid performances about but that could hardly be properly be directed at Bruno Walter's cycle , or the gloriously clear eyed Boult , the affectionate Halle/Loughran or the LSO/Jochum recordings all of the 1960s and 1970s.
My immediate response to the extracts from Chailly's Third was how much more exciting it sounded under Walter and Furtwangler. The opening of the latter's DG Third from 27.04.1954 was such a revelation when I bought it I found myself playing the first minute or so time and time again .
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