The last solo BAL as I recall was Shostakovich’s Piano Quintet - 30th March 2019.
Building a Library - General Discussion
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Originally posted by Heldenleben View PostTo paraphrase the words of Ho Chi Minh isn’t it too early to tell...?
Richard McGregor explains the misunderstanding behind Zhou Enlai’s famous utterance — “too soon to tell” — on the impact of the French Revolution: The former premier’s answer has become a frequently deployed cliché, used as evidence of the sage Chinese ability to think long-term – in contrast to impatient westerners. The trouble is that Zhou […]
.Last edited by vinteuil; 08-04-21, 10:16.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... a pedant (moi?) might want to let facts get in the way of a good story -
Richard McGregor explains the misunderstanding behind Zhou Enlai’s famous utterance — “too soon to tell” — on the impact of the French Revolution: The former premier’s answer has become a frequently deployed cliché, used as evidence of the sage Chinese ability to think long-term – in contrast to impatient westerners. The trouble is that Zhou […]
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I once repeated the Britten quote that “ the rot set in with Beethoven “ to a Catholic musician friend who replied “No, it started with Palestrina” ...
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Originally posted by Heldenleben View PostYes I knew the quote was apocryphal but had forgotten who’d said it. It’s the sort of quote you really want to be true isn’t it? Even though the French Revolution did have an immediate and profound impact....better stop as this will otherwise bumped to another thread...f
I once repeated the Britten quote that “ the rot set in with Beethoven “ to a Catholic musician friend who replied “No, it started with Palestrina” ...
Oh I see - that China Digital Times story is a shame .
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Originally posted by Petrushka View Post
Having said that, I still think there is a place on Radio 3 for a comparative review programme that helps give guidance to those in the same position as I was 50 years ago but the BaL format as it stands now isn't it. Perhaps an 'Interpretations on Record' kind of programme, taken out of 'Record Review', without the concept of a 'winner' and given to a broadcaster with some authority on the work might fulfil these requirements?
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View Post...So I woke up to find I'd started a thread, when I never, your honour: I been fitted up!"...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 crb11 View PostFor the benefit of those of us not old enough to remember Interpretations on Record, could you flesh out what your proposed format would look like in practice, perhaps taking a core classical piece like the Mozart piano concerto recently covered on BAL as an example. I can see the obvious benefits of a single presenter with expertise, but in what other ways would it differ from BAL in its current form?
Here’s an example of IOR from the 60’s . This would have been worth hearing
A monthly programme in which different interpretations on gramophone records are compared
DERYCK COOKE discusses Strauss's Don Quixote as recorded by Fournier and Krauss. Frank Miller and Toscanini. Tortelier and Beecham, Tortelier and Kempe, and others. The programme also discusses the two recordings made by the composer himself with Mainardi and Uhl
Part of the “problem” is that , at the risk of sounding like F.R. Leavis , the “culture” that created musicologist/journalist allrounders like Deryck Cooke doesn’t exist any more. It’s been annexed by Academia on the one hand and indifferent broadsheet journalism on the other.
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Originally posted by Petrushka View Post[A] The sheer volume of recordings of the classical repertoire now available renders the entire format of BaL as outdated and absurd. How can a 45 minute slot on, say, a Tchaikovsky or Beethoven symphony come to any meaningful conclusion about a 'winner'?
[B] Having said that, I still think there is a place on Radio 3 for a comparative review programme that helps give guidance to those in the same position as I was 50 years ago but the BaL format as it stands now isn't it. Perhaps an 'Interpretations on Record' kind of programme, taken out of 'Record Review', without the concept of a 'winner' and given to a broadcaster with some authority on the work might fulfil these requirements?
Re B I have also been thinking that some version of the old Rob Cowan programme - can't remember its name - would also do a similar job to Interpretations on Record. (The Rob 'n' Jonathan twofers were, IIRC, informative and entertaining.)
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostBaL is of variable value and necessarily limited in scope but I still usually find it worth listening to despite irksome twofer format.
Their Excel database of over 800 editions, which I have only just discovered, (downloadable here) is well produced and quite useful.
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