Originally posted by richardfinegold
View Post
BaL 30.12.17 - Mozart: Symphony no. 38 in D, K.504 "Prague"
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI have - and the conclusion is that they are and it isn't. Why do you think that other people - including both professional and amateur Musicians - find these repeats an important part of their enjoyment of the work?
(I was hoping you'd engage in a discussion of the nature of the D major Tonality in K405, but ... ah well.)
I'm not familiar with these Bach arrangements.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostI am quite unable to play an instrument or (as far as I know, the last, very distant time, I tried) sing. I never sing along to any of the music I listen to (although I'm sure I did, back in the day to Rock and Pop). I can just remember my father attempting to teach me on the piano, but - probably daunted by his own very evident, sight-reading, improvisational, prowess - I was all thumbs and soon gave up. Not that this should necessarily imply any thwarted, or untapped potential. I may (laboriously) fish out some detail from an imslp score (or similar), but if I try to follow one while listening, I always fall hopelessly behind, or get lost. So, somewhat counter-productive.
I often find very (over-)familiar themes from Classical Works forming jazzy, rhythmical, varyingly syncopated improvisations in my head.... a sort of musical doodling, I suppose. Or "Pleasure viewed from the Shores of Boredom", to misuse Roland Barthes. Beyond that dubious revelation, I don't claim any kind of musical creativity, let alone performing ability, at all.
***
I don't ever recall actually regretting my lack of ability to play the piano, or guitar or whatever.... always an adherent of embracing your fate, I concluded that, had I spent more time attempting to perfect, or improve, a practical musical ability, I would never have been able to access and devote my time to all the wonderful music I've spent so many wonderful hours actually listening to.
And I probably wouldn't have become an audiophile either. (Though I could blame Dad's hugely heavy, wooden-cased Akai-4000D, of which he made me the tonmeister of his own recordings, for that... (the early link between impressive engineering and sound....).
On Open Reel, I recorded the Top 40 mostly (Montego Bay, Alright Now, Ride a White Swan...). But I recall an early, fairly successful, effort from Radio 3 with the VPO/Karl Bohm in the Eroica, and thinking: if only my LPs could sound that good....
Comment
-
-
Just listened to the programme again. I thought the arguments made sense, and he gave brief nods to the early recordings (Schuricht, Kubelik, Walter, von Karajan, Beecham) which were always going to be non-starters. The rest of the time he concentrated on Norrington, Fischer and Jacobs - symphony orchestra, chamber orchestra and period instruments - with single mentions of others, and scads of other 'favourites' that weren't mentioned at all. In the end, with such a vast number available, I suppose the reviewer has to focus on a chosen (very) short list.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.
Comment
-
Comment