Originally posted by Heldenleben
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BaL 22.05.21 - Shostakovich: Piano Concerto no. 2
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostThe Alexeev/Maksymiuk CFP has always satisfied me as far the work can. The big tune of the slow movement seems so wasted and underdeveloped.
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Originally posted by Heldenleben View PostI wonder if it was a case of a composer coming up with a humdinger of a slow movt tune and then realising that were he to develop it Brahms style it would unbalance the work completely. Interesting that Beethoven has short slow movts in 4 and 5 ..
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Originally posted by cloughie View Post
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[QUOTE=Heldenleben;847259]Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostThe graph probably shows the extent of the influence of American English.
Thing is a lot of American English is 17th century English imported by exiled Puritan Cambridge academics and the like . It’s arguably more English than Contemporary English ...
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For me it's not really a US/Brit issue. The choice of the -ed or -t ending for the regular past tense ending in English has been fluid for centuries and still is. Some always have -t: knelt, slept, felt, spent, kept, sent etc. Still some flexible ones: burned/burnt, leaned/lent, smelt/smelled, spoiled/spoilt, spilled/spilt etc
Some fossils still in occasional use: girded/girt, blest/blessed, built/builded, bended (as in knee)/bent etc
The final -ed is often devoiced (devoist) in pronunciation without the spelling changing, kissed, faced, increased, worked, dropped, touched. Used has both: used to, devoiced, otherwise voiced.
There are even a couple of irregular verbs which take -t rather than -en: bring/brought, think/thought.
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BBM I think Argerich has only recorded the first Shostakovich Concerto .
Out of interest I have acquired the Benstein NYPO performance and although Alexeev is snappier in the first movement Lenny really does make more of that slow movement.
The couplings on a cheap CD that is still available in the format are Previn/Zacchiano and Bernstein the First Piano Concerto (very enjoyable if not quite Argerich or Andnes and a fabulous performance of the First Cello Concerto with Yo Yo Maand Ormandy which I have known of for donkeys years but never heard - it’s terrific and I prefer it even to Weilerstein and Schiff my other non Rostropovich favourites.Last edited by Barbirollians; 17-05-21, 18:48.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostBBM I think Argerich has only recorded the first Shostakovich Concerto .
Out of interest I have acquired the Benstein NYPO performance and although Alexeev is snappier in the first movement Lenny really does make more of that slow movement.
The couplings on a cheap CD that is still available in the format are Previn/Zacchiano and Bernstein the First Piano Concerto (very enjoyable if not quite Argerich or Andnes and a fabulous performance of the First Cello Concerto with Yo Yo Maand Ormandy which I have known of for donkeys years but never heard - it’s terrific and I prefer it even to Weilerstein and Schiff my other non Rostropovich favourites.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by Darloboy View PostPossibly explains why it hasn't been covered by BaL for 35 years. Last covered in its own right by Geoffrey Norris in June 1980 when he chose Eugene List conducted by Maxim Shostakovich as his first choice.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostSoon to begin.
Or is it the mic ?
Or is it the broadband connection?
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