I wonder whether recorded sound balance will be discussed in the programme. I have the Menuhin/Walton, which mikes up the solo viola to an extent that I find distracting and undesirable. I haven’t heard the work in the concert hall, where the balance would be very different. I know the art of recording necessitates certain compromises, but this often goes too far.
BaL 4.03.23 - Walton: Viola Concerto
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That, I think, is a feature of all Menuhin concerto recordings (even Mozart) , and I think it's a legacy from 78 days where the soloist was often very forwardly-balanced. I don't know, but I wouldn't be surprised to hear that he required it.
It wasn't necessary because Menuhin had a big tone anyway. When I heard him play it in Birmingham Town Hall in 1972 he had no difficulty penetrating the orchestral sound.
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I heard Menuhin playing it in London (Festival Hall) in 1972, at the Walton 70th birthday concert, and the amplitude of his sound was not the problem. He filled the hall, but the quality and technical prowess of his performance was very sub-par that evening, sadly. I heard him live a number of times but, to my regret, I don't think I ever caught him on a really good day.
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Yes, he was uneven then; one could never tell what sort of performance he would produce. I think this is why he took to conducting more in later years.
His Birmingham outing of the concerto was fine, but a friend of mine went to hear him play some Bach around the same to me and said he wished he hadn't gone. And then years later, playing the Frank Martin 'Polyptique' at the Festival Hall, he was wonderful!
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Originally posted by makropulos View PostI heard Menuhin playing it in London (Festival Hall) in 1972, at the Walton 70th birthday concert, and the amplitude of his sound was not the problem. He filled the hall, but the quality and technical prowess of his performance was very sub-par that evening, sadly. I heard him live a number of times but, to my regret, I don't think I ever caught him on a really good day.
I also saw him play the Beethoven with the RPO and Norman del Mar - and on that occasion also in the mid 1980s he was in very good form.
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Originally posted by makropulos View PostI heard Menuhin playing it in London (Festival Hall) in 1972, at the Walton 70th birthday concert, and the amplitude of his sound was not the problem. He filled the hall, but the quality and technical prowess of his performance was very sub-par that evening, sadly. I heard him live a number of times but, to my regret, I don't think I ever caught him on a really good day.
A year later I had the privilege of playing the Lennox Berkeley Trio for Violin, Horn and Piano with Menuhin and David Atherton. At our first rehearsal Sir Yehudi gave the impression of not knowing the work at all... he even said to David and I "you boys (sic) will have to teach me this piece", but I think he went on to give a very good account of the violin part in the concert. I do remember that in the 3rd movement there was a potentially hazardous 'staccato' violin passage that became much more fluent when he played it 'pizzicato' (with Berkeley's approval, of course).
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Originally posted by Tony Halstead View PostI heard from a reliable source that, during the applause, Sir William turned to his wife and said "that's the last time I'm going to let that b***er play my concertos" (!)
A year later I had the privilege of playing the Lennox Berkeley Trio for Violin, Horn and Piano with Menuhin and David Atherton. At our first rehearsal Sir Yehudi gave the impression of not knowing the work at all... he even said to David and I "you boys (sic) will have to teach me this piece", but I think he went on to give a very good account of the violin part in the concert. I do remember that in the 3rd movement there was a potentially hazardous 'staccato' violin passage that became much more fluent when he played it 'pizzicato' (with Berkeley's approval, of course).
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostSomewhat off topic but this was a great favourite disc of my youth. The Ireland has been updated to CD but I have only just discovered that the Berkleley is available via QOBUZ, coupled with the Mozart k. 452 Quintet.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostI wonder whether recorded sound balance will be discussed in the programme. I have the Menuhin/Walton, which mikes up the solo viola to an extent that I find distracting and undesirable. I haven’t heard the work in the concert hall, where the balance would be very different. I know the art of recording necessitates certain compromises, but this often goes too far.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostIf you're looking for a CD, it appeared in the EMI British Composers series Berkeley Centenary Album, still going cheap s/h:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Berkeley-Ce...ar%2C99&sr=1-1
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Thanks so much for posting that picture of the Ireland/Berkeley LP, Bryn; how the years rolled back. I still have my copy up in the loft. I also have the original issue, CLP 1029, where the coupling was the Mozart piano and wind quintet.
One feature of those 'HMV 20' series LPs were the 'Vitrographs' by George Pollock, on the covers. I had several.
I was also interested in Tony's account of Yehudi Menuhin playing pizzicato the tricky passage in the Berkeley trio. As I recall, Manoug Parikian plays it arco splendidly in the old HMV recording. But for me, it is Dennis Brain's presence whih ennobles (not too strong a word, I think) that recording. I find his playing of so many phrases quite haunting for days.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostMoura Lympany in the Rawsthorne ?
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