Bring back the way it was!
Building a Library - General Discussion
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May I thank those who have come up with affordable recommendable CDs featuring the Stravinsky Violin Concerto? As usual, World of Books has come to my rescue when I follow their advice (and there's also Music Magpie and Amazon). It's nice to know that, even if BaL can't or won't bear its more cost-conscious listeners in mind, one can easily find help and advice on the Forum.
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostTim Hardin
Joan was one of many who covered it inc Bobby Darin, Four Tops.
Just had a look - I didn’t realise quite how many!
Tim Hardin originally recorded If I Were a Carpenter written by Tim Hardin and Tim Hardin released it on the single If I Were a Carpenter in 1966. It was also covered by Owen Moore, Trident, Les & Larry Elgart Nashville Country Sound, J.C.P. feat. Gordon Griffin and other artists.
The great, the good, the not so good and many I have never heard of!
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostMost of us on the Forum have a high degree of knowledge of the record catalogue and have long ago decided on our favourite versions of the work under review, so we aren't the target audience for BaL in the way we were when impecunious students deciding how best to spend our hard-earned cash, in my case back in the early 1970s.
Originally posted by Petrushka View PostThe sheer volume of recordings of the classical repertoire now available renders the entire format of BaL as outdated and absurd.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'?
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?
Risks could be taken elsewhere by Radio 3. Hannah French on Sunday could play a full symphony stiched together from 4 - 12 different performances. Now that could be interesting....
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostI really wonder if this is true. If you look at the guests/members figures at the bottom of the first Forum page, you can see that there are often a lot of guests - I imagine learning from the threads here.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 DracoM View Post
But maybe they daren't..................just in case of what OTHER revelations / opinions / buzzes they may discover in the process............!
Mind you, a listener poll could produce some refreshingly different winners, such as Eric Morecambe's unforgettable rendition of the Grieg Piano Concerto (well, the first bit), Florence Foster Jenkins's Queen Of The Night aria, and Jim Morrison's Alabama Song.
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostI agree there didn’t seem to be much point in playing so much of the Mutter/Orkis recording for it to be dismissed.
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Originally posted by Cockney Sparrow View PostOccasionally a very well informed, very insightful and authoritative reviewer will be on "the approved list" for selection and will slip through.
Originally posted by Cockney Sparrow View PostBut generally its following the trend to the superficial and partial
Originally posted by Cockney Sparrow View PostSo thank goodness there is still this board and its knowledgeable members, Gramophone and other similar publications, and MusicWeb - as you say :
"...many of the older reviewers are not merely reduced in appearance but now utterly sidelined "
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I don't have any issue with NL's discussion, she made some good points and had picked up some unusual recordings and I certainly don't have any issues with female presenters, I couldn't care less about the gender or age (or race or anything else) of the presenters as long as they do a good job.
My issue is that we now have so few recordings discussed that when the presenter puts in a few interesting examples as NL did, they are then too limited in the recordings that they are realistically considering. We end up with a very short list of only 2 or 3 real candidates and, rather than being immediately dismissed, the likes of Mutter then need to be considered further. What we really need is a shortlist of real contenders (and half a dozen may be enough) and the freedom to add any number examples to make quick points.
Of course the twofer format continues to waste valuable time.
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View PostI thought that the point of illustrating whichever one of the second movement variations it was with Mutter was to show that it could be played quite differently, rather than dismissing it out of hand. I like the fact that she included Goldberg and Kraus from the 1930s, as well as Busch. We all know by now that this conversational format requires a fairly short shortlist which I found to cover a reasonable range of styles and approaches. So, pace the "Disgusteds, Tunbridge Wells", I didn't feel that I had wasted 40 minutes of my life listening to it and have ordered the Mullova, which I greatly liked.
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