Originally posted by Richard Tarleton
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BaL 30.11.19 - Purcell: Dido & Aeneas
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostDr Gibson is not a professional broadcaster, how ever you or I like to parse the word, but an academic, and I would hope we can agree on that.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by doversoul1 View PostAny thoughts on the recordings we heard on the programme? I thought Emma Kirkby as Dido was a most odd choice. She was a perfect Belinda to Catherine Bott’s Dido which wasn’t included on today’s programme.Last edited by MickyD; 30-11-19, 18:12.
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Originally posted by Darloboy View PostThe Hogwood was first choice in 2009 and the Jacobs in 2001 so you have both the previous recommendations. Back in 1998 there was a Purcell Stage Works BaL in which Christie was the recommendation for Dido alongside a special recommendation for Lewis because of Janet Baker’s interpretation.
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Any thoughts on the recordings we heard on the programme? I thought Emma Kirkby as Dido was a most odd choice. She was a perfect Belinda to Catherine Bott’s Dido which wasn’t included on today’s programme.
Anthony Lewis, a pioneer in the revival of staging Baroque operas, was at least partly responsible for launching Janet Baker's career. Thank goodness we have her Dido's Lament for posterity! Not sure Jessye Norman (Raymond Leppard) floats my boat, fine soprano though she is.
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Originally posted by DracoM View PostBut...but...........surely with something like this work, or e.g. Beethoven or Mozart symphonies, or Wagner's operas, how on earth CAN a review of this length ever hope to cover all the recordings, or even mention all of them?
Just asking!
To take one example: any decent comparative review of Dido and Aeneas needs to find time to discuss textual questions (e.g. who has recorded the alleged 'torso' and who has added this or that); it needs to differentiate between recordings by the same singer (e.g. not lumping together both Baker versions as an "iconic classic" when her interpretations - not to mention the musical content, castings and stylistic decisions of those two recordings - are so very different); it needs to devote some space to recorded quality (was that anywhere at all this morning?); it needs serious and informed discussion of different dramatic approaches to the work as heard (absent today, bar some opinionated scattergun remarks); above all, the cultural context of the work, from Purcell's time to our own, needs to be addressed (merely saying repeatedly that "there are different camps" as to interpretation is too narrow and unhelpful a view for newcomers.)
That's why I seriously wonder who BaL is aimed at these days, and regret the loss of a tool which could still - I believe - have its uses. I suppose some listeners want somebody else to tell them "who's version is best" so they can go and buy it, but many more are interested in the kind of comparisons which the current format - and choice of presenters - rarely allows.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostThat's a hard question, dovers. One can never know what a dramatic soprano aria might have sounded like in Purcell's time, but one should not perhaps 'over-think' the plot or the psychology (e.g. in posts 34 - 36). D&A was an entertainment after all. Speaking personally, I don't find an over-coloured operatic voice appropriate, and I'd rather hear a Bott, a Kirkby or an Elin M-T
None of which is to say that these voices cannot provide performances of equal aesthetic value - they can, and they have. Although I don't much like listening to the complete performance these days, I know that Janet Baker's first recording of Dido's Lament (under Lewis) will remain a desert island disc for me until the day I die. Nor is Flagstad so far behind... this is a question of great artistry, big enough to change lives, not stylistic rectitude.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostThat's a hard question, dovers. One can never know what a dramatic soprano aria might have sounded like in Purcell's time, but one should not perhaps 'over-think' the plot or the psychology (e.g. in posts 34 - 36). D&A was an entertainment after all. Speaking personally, I don't find an over-coloured operatic voice appropriate, and I'd rather hear a Bott, a Kirkby or an Elin M-T https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uGQq3HcOB0Y
Anthony Lewis, a pioneer in the revival of staging Baroque operas, was at least partly responsible for launching Janet Baker's career. Thank goodness we have her Dido's Lament for posterity! Not sure Jessye Norman (Raymond Leppard) floats my boat, fine soprano though she is.
Tomorrow 23.00
Today’s episode is all about the voice. How did the pioneers of authentic classical repertory create a vocal sound that was just right?
Back to Dido.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostThis is a vital point, which does cast doubt on the question as to whether BaL can be much use to anyone, any more. With dozens of recordings - even of Purcell's semi-operas these days - the kind of all-inclusive reviews which were possible in the 1970s simply aren't feasible these days. I sympathise with R3 on that point, but addressing it by (a) truncating the time available for a BaL review, (b) ditching concentrated talks with multiple examples into chat shows with less music, and (c) limiting the contributors to discussion of a small number of recordings, has resulted in the kind of nonsense we had this morning - whether we found Dr Gibson a competent reviewer or not.
To take one example: any decent comparative review of Dido and Aeneas needs to find time to discuss textual questions (e.g. who has recorded the alleged 'torso' and who has added this or that; it needs to differentiate between recordings by the same singer (e.g. not lumping together both Baker versions as an "iconic classic" when her interpretation - not to mention the musical content, castings and stylistic decisions of those two recordings - are so very different); it needs to devote some space to recorded quality (was that anywhere at all this morning?); it needs serious and informed discussion of different dramatic approaches to the work as heard (absent today, bar some opinionated scattergun remarks); above all, the cultural context of the work, from Purcell's time to our own, needs to be addressed (merely saying repeatedly that "there are different camps" as to interpretation is too narrow and unhelpful a view for newcomers.)
That's why I seriously wonder who BaL is aimed at these days, and regret the loss of a tool which could still - I believe - have its uses. I suppose some listeners want somebody else to tell them "who's version is best" so they can go and buy it, but many more are interested in the kind of comparisons which the current format - and choice of presenters - rarely allows.
Our threads can amplify those comments and choices too....which is often a lotta fun.
Even if you posit a new Interpretations on Record, there would still have to be some limitations to the range presented, especial with a familiar classic. And one's subjective perception of/response to the quality or lack of it would still be mostly due to the critic herself - not necessarily time or singular presentation.
Otherwise stick to Gramophone Collection - excellent every month usually with a shortlist of 4 in different categories..... last month a very good survey of Tchaikovsky's 4th (RC)....Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 30-11-19, 20:12.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostThis is a vital point, which does cast doubt on the question as to whether BaL can be much use to anyone, any more. With dozens of recordings - even of Purcell's semi-operas these days - the kind of all-inclusive reviews which were possible in the 1970s simply aren't feasible these days. I sympathise with R3 on that point, but addressing it by (a) truncating the time available for a BaL review, (b) ditching concentrated talks with multiple examples into chat shows with less music, and (c) limiting the contributors to discussion of a small number of recordings, has resulted in the kind of nonsense we had this morning - whether we found Dr Gibson a competent reviewer or not.
To take one example: any decent comparative review of Dido and Aeneas needs to find time to discuss textual questions (e.g. who has recorded the alleged 'torso' and who has added this or that; it needs to differentiate between recordings by the same singer (e.g. not lumping together both Baker versions as an "iconic classic" when her interpretation - not to mention the musical content, castings and stylistic decisions of those two recordings - are so very different); it needs to devote some space to recorded quality (was that anywhere at all this morning?); it needs serious and informed discussion of different dramatic approaches to the work as heard (absent today, bar some opinionated scattergun remarks); above all, the cultural context of the work, from Purcell's time to our own, needs to be addressed (merely saying repeatedly that "there are different camps" as to interpretation is too narrow and unhelpful a view for newcomers.)
That's why I seriously wonder who BaL is aimed at these days, and regret the loss of a tool which could still - I believe - have its uses. I suppose some listeners want somebody else to tell them "who's version is best" so they can go and buy it, but many more are interested in the kind of comparisons which the current format - and choice of presenters - rarely allows.
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I agree with Jayne about the merits of the Gramophone Collection - although it obviously has somewhat limited editorial space, it’s so well done that a sensible reasoned argument can be followed. Is one of the problems with BaL at the moment the reluctance to use G reviewers? Incidentally, the BBC Music Mag version isn’t quite as good, not so much because of reviewer quality, but because of much more limited space and the dumbing-down involved in daft headings like ‘Three Other Great Versions’ (there aren’t always four ‘Great’ versions!) and ‘One to Avoid’ (often an artificial choice, generally Karajan if he’s available). But it’s still usually interesting, although the format limited to just five versions opens it up to much the same criticisms we see here about the current radio BaL.
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