Originally posted by gurnemanz
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BaL 8.07.23 - Stravinsky: Petrushka
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Originally posted by Maclintick View PostThanks for this, Gurnie -- in your debt as often recently ! Somehow I missed SJ's "Discovering Music" on first appearance & was persuaded by his well-argued assertion that the composer became committed in later life to abstraction & eschewed emotion - hence the removal of "dolente" etc from the 1947 revision. I hope Jonathan Cross will compare & contrast 1911 &:1947 in his survey. FWIW, I prefer the sound of the cornet in the ballerina's fanfare..must now order a 1911 version...
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Something very weird going on with this Petrushka BaL. Stravinsky's own recording has been excluded, because "we're familiar with it".
'Stravinsky expert' Jonathan Cross is into metronomes, and asks whether Monteux's 1959 speed reflects the tempo of the first performance. As this was a ballet (which is what the piece is, remember) it would have been much slower even than that, I fancy. And can't he hear that the slurring Boston cellos are making a performance choice, characterising country fair musicians, not just playing badly?
Perhaps we need a ballet and *recording* expert, not a 'Stravinsky expert' concerned with metronomes and orchestral sound timbres, to illuminate the piece better?
Now, predictably, JC (who wants Madama Butterfly banned, incidentally) is breast-beating over the "racial stereotype" and "orientalism" (?) of the "Blackamoor" character. I've heard enough...Last edited by Master Jacques; 08-07-23, 09:52.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostSomething very weird going on with this Petrushka BaL. Stravinsky's own recording has been excluded, because "we're familiar with it".
'Stravinsky expert' Jonathan Cross is into metronomes, and asks whether Monteux's 1959 speed reflects the tempo of the first performance. As this was a ballet (which is what the piece is, remember) it would have been much slower even than that, I fancy. And can't he hear that the slurring Boston cellos are making a performance choice, characterising country fair musicians, not just playing badly?
Perhaps we need a ballet and *recording* expert, not a 'Stravinsky expert' concerned with metronomes and orchestral sound timbres, to illuminate the piece better?
Now, predictably, JC (who wants Madama Butterfly banned, incidentally) is breast-beating over the "racial stereotype" and "orientalism" (?) of the "Blackamoor" character. I've heard enough...
In addition to the points you've made, we're getting merely cursory comments about the 1911 and 1947 versions. I'd expected more from an expert.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostSomething very weird going on with this Petrushka BaL. Stravinsky's own recording has been excluded, because "we're familiar with it".
'Stravinsky expert' Jonathan Cross is into metronomes, and asks whether Monteux's 1959 speed reflects the tempo of the first performance. As this was a ballet (which is what the piece is, remember) it would have been much slower even than that, I fancy. And can't he hear that the slurring Boston cellos are making a performance choice, characterising country fair musicians, not just playing badly?
Perhaps we need a ballet and *recording* expert, not a 'Stravinsky expert' concerned with metronomes and orchestral sound timbres, to illuminate the piece better?
Now, predictably, JC (who wants Madama Butterfly banned, incidentally) is breast-beating over the "racial stereotype" and "orientalism" (?) of the "Blackamoor" character. I've heard enough...
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostHas any one ever seen Petrushka ?
I recently listened to the Petrenko/Liverpool recording for the first time, and thought the speeds a little brisk, until the final tableau, when they became ridiculously fast. An old friend of mine danced the role for some years, ("an ankle killer, like Bluebird" ) also the Moor, before graduating to Showman and Ballet Master. He declared the Liverpool Tableau 4 undanceable - the coachmen and the wetnurses would not cope.
The Blackface question has been around for a few years. https://www.dancemagazine.com/blackface-in-ballet/
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostYes that’s when I gave up. It’s a record review not a social essay. Has any one ever seen Petrushka ? Whenever I’ve seen the Rite or The Firebird I always think great music , shame about the dance (lack thereof).
Anyone who thinks Ozawa's perfectly correct reading is somehow superior to Monteux's, with all its power, colour and huge sense of theatre, simply because the French conductor isn't a slave to metronomic precision, has got their ears on the wrong way (to my way of thinking, and feeling). Just as anyone who thinks the Bernstein version is "Hollywood Dance" needs, perhaps, to turn down the condescension dial.
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Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View PostThe Blackface question has been around for a few years. https://www.dancemagazine.com/blackface-in-ballet/
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostQuite so. It's a social question, though, not a musical one. To say (as Mr Cross did) that Stravinsky is writing "stereotypes" into the music, is projecting modern social mores onto a 19th century Russian puppet show. It's virtue signalling of the stupidest kind.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostImpressed that others have seen the work so many times . I’ve only seen it once on TV. On the social question I’m still trying to meet anyone who has read ‘Love and Theft’ generally thought one of the definitive academic works on ante-bellum minstrelsy and blackface . A tiny bit turgid but very thought provoking.
[As you'll have seen, I changed "stupidest" in my post to "most exasperating", to remove any ad hominem element. I'm sure Mr Cross thinks long and hard before coming out with his conscientious objections to dead, white male composers and dramatists who disturb him.]
Minstrelsy and blackface have come my way, in research of 19th and early 20th century popular music theatre cultures. The ironic thing is, that "minstrelsy" at least is making a big comeback, with black-only banjo bands very much on the rise, lapped up by predominantly white audiences. The difference is, that they are self-run, rather than promoted and managed by white, male entrepreneurs. Which seems to make them OK.
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