Originally posted by jayne lee wilson
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BaL 6.03.21 - Debussy: Études pour piano
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I'm not going to get into the perennial arguments about (The) Gramophone, I gave up on it some years ago, I guess it may have improved in the meantime but the thing is I really don't need it any more, given that listening to new releases is no longer restricted to professional critics and the rich. I admit that I do sometimes take the Greenfield approach mentioned above, of honing in on some moment(s) that have particular importance for me before deciding to give something a proper listen, but then I'm not being paid to air my opinions in public like he was, so I can do what I like. I'm happy to be liberated from the opinions of critics. The answers to my question about why the Uchida recording of these pieces stands so far above the others just served to confirm my impression that, back in the day, their influence had a deadening effect on people's adventurousness in listening (including my own no doubt). There's no need for that any more.
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Originally posted by Goon525 View PostYes I do. I think a little earlier , late 80s/early 90s, edited by Rob Cowan. Reflected an outpouring of transfers from analogue to mid and budget priced CDs. Understandably, lacked longevity once the CD explosion died down. I think Classic CD was a competitive publication which lasted several years, edited, if memory serves, by Rob Ainsley, who incidentally has a piece in the current BBC MM.
On a more general note, I share Jayne’s love of Gramophone, having bought and devoured every issue since my first, July 1973. It’s great having access now to the entire archive via my iPad. FWIW, I think the current panel of reviewers is strong, and the magazine appears to be heading toward its centenary in 2023 in pretty good shape. Of course one doesn’t always agree with its conclusions, but it maintains a high standard, higher than BBC MM, although I do read that too.
I always bought the Penguin guides too, but my respect for them steadily diminished as its quality went down. The problem with having only three reviewers was that only one of them, Robert Layton, had much gravitas. Ivan March (although he put the thing together) was a hopelessly unreliable reviewer, and as for Ted - who to be fair did write some pretty good reviews in G, although perhaps not of the Lenny West Side Story. Have I retold the story here of a friend of mine who asked EG at a party how he managed to review so many records? At the time Ted was the Guardian’s main man as well as heavily represented in G. His response - “With many of them, I just listen to the crucial moments of a work” - which boggled my mind then and still does.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI'm not going to get into the perennial arguments about (The) Gramophone, I gave up on it some years ago, I guess it may have improved in the meantime but the thing is I really don't need it any more, given that listening to new releases is no longer restricted to professional critics and the rich. I admit that I do sometimes take the Greenfield approach mentioned above, of honing in on some moment(s) that have particular importance for me before deciding to give something a proper listen, but then I'm not being paid to air my opinions in public like he was, so I can do what I like. I'm happy to be liberated from the opinions of critics. The answers to my question about why the Uchida recording of these pieces stands so far above the others just served to confirm my impression that, back in the day, their influence had a deadening effect on people's adventurousness in listening (including my own no doubt). There's no need for that any more.
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One of the uses of Spotify et al is the ability to conduct one's own comparative review of a limited number of recordings.
Its always pleasing to hear that someone else responds as you do to a recorded performance and a widely acclaimed recording attracts my attention but I lost interest in the Gramophone after 40 years and flogged them along with Hi Fi News covering the same period to a s/h equipment dealer - £100 the lot.
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Originally posted by visualnickmos View PostI prety much concur. I would just add, that perhaps adherence to a certain set of critics, is a bit like getting used to a certain crossword-setters; you become sort of 'trained' into their mindset. When I was first intrigued by classical music at about 14 or 15, I knew nothing about critics, music magazines, and so on, and yet I soon got my head around the idea of collecting, and what to 'look out for' - all based on nothing but my puchases and budding collection.
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Originally posted by Goon525 View PostYes I do. I think a little earlier , late 80s/early 90s, edited by Rob Cowan. Reflected an outpouring of transfers from analogue to mid and budget priced CDs. Understandably, lacked longevity once the CD explosion died down. I think Classic CD was a competitive publication which lasted several years, edited, if memory serves, by Rob Ainsley, who incidentally has a piece in the current BBC MM.
On a more general note, I share Jayne’s love of Gramophone, having bought and devoured every issue since my first, July 1973. It’s great having access now to the entire archive via my iPad. FWIW, I think the current panel of reviewers is strong, and the magazine appears to be heading toward its centenary in 2023 in pretty good shape. Of course one doesn’t always agree with its conclusions, but it maintains a high standard, higher than BBC MM, although I do read that too.
I always bought the Penguin guides too, but my respect for them steadily diminished as its quality went down. The problem with having only three reviewers was that only one of them, Robert Layton, had much gravitas. Ivan March (although he put the thing together) was a hopelessly unreliable reviewer, and as for Ted - who to be fair did write some pretty good reviews in G, although perhaps not of the Lenny West Side Story. Have I retold the story here of a friend of mine who asked EG at a party how he managed to review so many records? At the time Ted was the Guardian’s main man as well as heavily represented in G. His response - “With many of them, I just listen to the crucial moments of a work” - which boggled my mind then and still does.
I bought every issue of Gramophone from about the same time as you but I fell out of love with the mag many years ago.
I gave away around 30 years worth of issues.“Music is the best means we have of digesting time." — Igor Stravinsky
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Originally posted by Edgy 2 View PostAh yes, thanks
I bought every issue of Gramophone from about the same time as you but I fell out of love with the mag many years ago.
I gave away around 30 years worth of issues.
The EMG Monthly Letter c/w the annual Art of Record Buying were the bibles of the trade - anything which achieved 2 stars and an ees was pure magic.
It is now 20 posts since Debussy was even hinted at - we have gone somewhat off topic and I hope does not indicate a level of disinterest in Claude’s Etudes!
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI'm not going to get into the perennial arguments about (The) Gramophone, I gave up on it some years ago, I guess it may have improved in the meantime but the thing is I really don't need it any more, given that listening to new releases is no longer restricted to professional critics and the rich. I admit that I do sometimes take the Greenfield approach mentioned above, of honing in on some moment(s) that have particular importance for me before deciding to give something a proper listen, but then I'm not being paid to air my opinions in public like he was, so I can do what I like. I'm happy to be liberated from the opinions of critics. The answers to my question about why the Uchida recording of these pieces stands so far above the others just served to confirm my impression that, back in the day, their influence had a deadening effect on people's adventurousness in listening (including my own no doubt). There's no need for that any more.
That influence, educational and historical, as I tried my best to describe above, had exactly the opposite effect on me, and still does. I was subject to some dreadful snobbery from a-level music students and other bourgeois "musiclovers" who never bothered with Gramophone or Radio 3 and considered Bruckner and Mahler unlistenable, never mind Schoenberg. How could I possibly claim to love Classical Music when I couldn't even read it or play the piano?
With the Guides, that triumvirate offered me an escape into a much larger musical world. Why else did I become curious about 2VS, or Boulez or Birtwistle or Stockhausen, taping them off-air, borrowing records and reading up?
Far from deadening, they gave me new life! Showed me that I could forget the narrow attitudes that told me I was "pretending" to enjoy Webern (who they considered "noisy rubbish"....)
Of course Qobuz is now my main source for hearing New Releases, but the Gramophone (and other online sources) offer that essential perspective of the 2nd Opinion, or a 3rd or a 4th. Many other insightful features ( the current issue is a full of interest, a cracker). Contrary opinions are usually far more provocative of one's own thoughts, one's own self-questioning.Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 26-02-21, 21:20.
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Originally posted by visualnickmos View PostI prety much concur. I would just add, that perhaps adherence to a certain set of critics, is a bit like getting used to a certain crossword-setters; you become sort of 'trained' into their mindset. When I was first intrigued by classical music at about 14 or 15, I knew nothing about critics, music magazines, and so on, and yet I soon got my head around the idea of collecting, and what to 'look out for' - all based on nothing but my puchases and budding collection.
How can one judge one's own knowledge or understanding of records and recording, or the lack of it, without wider reading? Take the current issue of Gramophone - brilliant classics-revisited discussion on the Kondrashin DSCH 15 and a collection survey of the Szymanowski Stabat Mater...
The Gramophone Archive reveals it as an essential part of Classical Music History. No-one would be here, discussing comparative recordings, if it (or those early Stereo Guides) had not existed.They created a culture of curiosity, a vocabulary of fine distinctions.
Record Review and BaL (whatever their current status), and contributors on this thread, are among its many heirs and beneficiaries.......and that is true even if you never read a word of them.Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 26-02-21, 22:11.
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I’m pretty much in agreement with Jayne’s last couple of postings. And incidentally, the Collection on the Szymanowski Stabat Mater had me rushing off to listen to the ‘winning’ version, easily available via Qobuz. I actually own the Rattle version (coupled with the third Symphony) which is a fine disc, but as so often happens, I’m not sure I’ve listened to it since just after its release in the mid 90s.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostThat is a very narrow view. From the start of my listening life, I came under many influences, took in different views (on Bruckner for example). It didn't take long to learn the biases of the writers on the Stereo Guides or the wider range on Gramophone or Radio 3, to develop my own view in a continuous evolution. It was a vitally stimulating part of the educational process, to take in other contrary opinions, question them, listen again, and question your own.
How can one judge one's own knowledge or understanding of records and recording, or the lack of it, without wider reading? Take the current issue of Gramophone - brilliant classics-revisited discussion on the Kondrashin DSCH 15 and a collection survey of the Szymanowski Stabat Mater...
The Gramophone Archive reveals it as an essential part of Classical Music History. No-one would be here, discussing comparative recordings, if it (or those early Stereo Guides) had not existed. They created a culture of curiosity, a vocabulary of fine distinctions.
Record Review and BaL (whatever their current status), and contributors on this thread, are among its many heirs and beneficiaries.......and that is true even if you never read a word of them.
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Originally posted by visualnickmos View PostI find your first words rather arrogant and brimming with superiority. The feeling I get from your posts generally, is one of - if someone disagrees with you, their views are somehow not valid, and you continually harp on about b*****y Gramaphone. You may think I have a narrow view. Quite what you mean specifically by that, is anyone's guess. Well, madam, my 'narrow view' has served me very well indeed, in my enjoyment of nearly fifty years of classical music being a major part of my life.
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