Originally posted by Richard Barrett
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BaL 22.04.17 - Mahler: Symphony no. 2
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostPerhaps because it shatters the illusion -- probably unjustified, as we all know about studio versus live -- of a real (actual) 'performance'?
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Co-incidentally wasn't it Klemperer who described tape editing as "Ein Schwindel " and compared listening to an edited recording as " like going to bed with a photo of Marilyn Monroe" ?
Just listening to the CBSO / Rattle - If there are 200 edits in the first movt of that then I salute the editor as I couldn't hear one. Lovely stereo image - maybe the harp a bit forward in places and the woodwind did seem to move around a tad but overall a tremendous sound. The string pizzicato section in the slow movt did sound acoustically different to the subsequent arco - but this is nit - picking .
Not believing the amount of editing that goes on I did a bit of US edit forum hopping - it was partly made up of complaints by editors themselves of the amount they have to do and it's impact on the notion of a performance . 200 in one long movement based on what they say sounds par for the course.
Maybe that's why I buy now so few CD 's and listen to R3 relays and live perfs these days . Equally maybe that's why recordings now sound unreal to me . Doesn't a Mahler performance need a bit of strain and imperfection ?
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThere's nothing "natural" about a live recording either - recording engineers have made very many crucial decisions about how it's going to sound: microphone placement, balance, and indeed very often editing between the concert recording and the dress rehearsal, or even within the concert recording, to tighten up a unison attack or shorten/lengthen a pause. These are ways of giving a different kind of immediacy to a recording from that which you'll naturally have when attending a live performance. You can't hear the edits, and you can't hear a difference in sound between one take and another. Doesn't that mean that indeed you are getting a sense of performance, despite what you might or might not know about how it was made? If you can't hear the difference between the "patchwork quilt" and the "bedspread", then in a real sense there isn't one. Vague impressions about the performance not sounding convincing could just as easily arise from some other aspect of what you hear.
I've sometimes wondered about those who buy a CD of a concert they've been at, for the very reasons you mention that I hadn't considered in my earlier posting!
Yes, it's a memento of the event, but it's unlikely to be what they heard.
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Information for people who haven't been involved in CD recording. You play a track right through(or that's what my old brass band did, then at various points in the music, we'd be asked to play certain phrases, or bars again. All were quite bemused by this procedure, but hey ho, we did as asked. And this was done, so on and so forth, till the disc was completed.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThere's nothing "natural" about a live recording either - recording engineers have made very many crucial decisions about how it's going to sound: microphone placement, balance, and indeed very often editing between the concert recording and the dress rehearsal, or even within the concert recording, to tighten up a unison attack or shorten/lengthen a pause. These are ways of giving a different kind of immediacy to a recording from that which you'll naturally have when attending a live performance. You can't hear the edits, and you can't hear a difference in sound between one take and another. Doesn't that mean that indeed you are getting a sense of performance, despite what you might or might not know about how it was made? If you can't hear the difference between the "patchwork quilt" and the "bedspread", then in a real sense there isn't one. Vague impressions about the performance not sounding convincing could just as easily arise from some other aspect of what you hear.
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostInformation for people who haven't been involved in CD recording. You play a track right through(or that's what my old brass band did, then at various points in the music, we'd be asked to play certain phrases, or bars again. All were quite bemused by this procedure, but hey ho, we did as asked. And this was done, so on and so forth, till the disc was completed.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by LaurieWatt View PostAgreed, absolutely correct, but you still end up with a beautiful patchwork quilt as opposed to the original beautiful bedspread.
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostYou play a track right through(or that's what my old brass band did, then at various points in the music, we'd be asked to play certain phrases, or bars again.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostIt also could be that Rattle being a perfectionist who can probably hear things that you or I wouldn't necessarily.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostWhich is presumably what he hoped to achieve in his Choral Pilgrimage set on SDG.
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostThe best version of the Mahler 2 and possibly the 1st, as well, imo. EA.
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