If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
Oop North, kazoo marching bands are commonly known as "jazz bands". They commonly also include glockenspiels on sticks. It confused the Hell out of me when I saw an advertisement for one in Blackpool and went along expecting something very different.
Oop North, kazoo marching bands are commonly known as "jazz bands".
Having lived in that region, man and boy, for forty-three of my fifty-six years (Lancashire, Yorkshire, Durham), can I put it on record that this is the first time I have ever heard Marching Bands so described! (Not that "commonly-known", I suggest: more - or "at least as commonly" referred to as "Silver Bands". )
It confused the Hell out of me when I saw an advertisement for one in Blackpool and went along expecting something very different.
[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
Oop North, kazoo marching bands are commonly known as "jazz bands".....
I think they called them that when I was growing up in South Wales.........I'll have to check with my mother later on (she was either in one or aspired to be one: I remember her practising baton twirling in the back garden.) Anyway, whatever they were called, they used to come through the streets from time to time...........as did the rag-and-bone van and the Alpine pop lorry...........
..... as did the rag-and-bone van and the Alpine pop lorry...........
"Van"?! There's posh! (Proper old horse & cart a la Steptoe round our way.) And Stanton's provided the pop - in huge glass (formerly stoneware) flagons.
[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
I am currently listening to Levine/Philadelphia, a recording from 1977. Very impressive. My only quibble is the finale which is a bit glib and races to the finish line, missing some of the scenery along the way. It is also fascinating to hear the Philadelphia from this time, as Ormandy's Orchestra was being transformed by Muti, here being led by a disciple of Szell. The strings do not have that fat Ormandy sound, which is a bit of a loss in the Adagietto, but more of a silky fist in glove kind of presence. The brass and winds are exemplary. It is to bad that in the glut of Mahler recordings a fine entry like this can be so overlooked.
I am currently listening to Levine/Philadelphia, a recording from 1977. Very impressive. My only quibble is the finale which is a bit glib and races to the finish line, missing some of the scenery along the way. It is also fascinating to hear the Philadelphia from this time, as Ormandy's Orchestra was being transformed by Muti, here being led by a disciple of Szell. The strings do not have that fat Ormandy sound, which is a bit of a loss in the Adagietto, but more of a silky fist in glove kind of presence. The brass and winds are exemplary. It is to bad that in the glut of Mahler recordings a fine entry like this can be so overlooked.
Agree with your comments about the Levine recording. I praised it on here upon its reissue in the Sony box in 2010 and must play it again.
"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
This recording comes from the 1987 BBC Proms and, as far as I am aware, is not available commercially.
Bernstein VPO Mahler 5th, Proms RAH 1987. (Poster states the source is a Nicam (HQ Audio) VHS recording of the concert). The ending is pretty blistering.... (for those not already fully acquainted with it).
EDIT : I just tried to play that You Tube again - and got a message " A problem occurred" . I hope it plays generally. I'm not sure, I'm using my 2nd choice browser (Chrome) which can be problematic on my Win7 PC. I have a problem with Firefox, which is my browser of choice.
Comment