Many thanks to Pulcinella for permission to relocate his recent Summer BaL to fill this slot.
BaL 2.12.23 - Bartok: The Miraculous Mandarin
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View Post
I have been impressed with the Dausgaard, which you recommended; listened to it again yesterday.
I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostWho is the library chooser ?
10.30 am
Building a Library
Kate Molleson chooses her favourite recording of Béla Bartók's The Miraculous Mandarin.
Three lowlifes force a beautiful woman to lure men into their seedy city den so they can rob them. The third of their victims is a Chinese Mandarin and the woman dances for him. The woman is repelled by the lust she has aroused in the Mandarin and the three thugs repeatedly attempt to kill him. But the Mandarin continues to stare longingly at the woman. Only when she has satisfied his desires does the Mandarin finally die.
With its lurid Expressionist scenario and tawdry urban setting, Bartók's 1919 ballet scandalised the audience at its 1927 premiere and it was closed by the authorities after its first performance. But now, with its dazzling orchestration and satisfying dramatic arc, the score has long been properly regarded as some of Bartók's finest music.
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While I might nit-pick about some of the orchestral ensemble not quite being up to LSO (Abbado) or VPO (Dohnányi) standard, it has great energy. Good if not stellar typical BBC City Halls recording. Dausgaard pretty much doesn't put a foot wrong, interpretation-wise. Given that it's Kate Molleson, I'd be very surprised if it isn't one of the chosen versions. Has this work ever had a sub-fusc recording? It also reminds me of the fine work which this combination of conductor and orchestra produced both in concerts which I attended and also on the radio. A great shame that it ended on a what always seemed like a less than harmonious note.
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Originally posted by Goon525 View PostNo change there then. Pretty predictable outcome, with both previous winners in the final three. (That’s not a criticism, by the way, probably justifiable choice.)
Kate's choice:
Hungarian Radio Chorus
Budapest Festival Orchestra/Iván Fischer
Philips 4761799
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Oh well, Kate M completely ignored the home team in Glasgow - mind you, she lives in Edinburgh so it wouldn't do to be choosing a weegie-based issue. Joking apart, I rather enjoyed this BaL. Marmite or not to others, the conversational format worked for me this morning. The three "finalists", as Goon 525 has already said, were no surprise but, given the quality of all three, one would hardly complain about the choice. That series of Bartók recordings which Fischer made for Philips is one of the joys of the catalogue. I'd never heard the Rattle before and was sufficiently impressed to shell out £3.55 (P&P included) for a used copy.
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View PostOh well, Kate M completely ignored the home team in Glasgow - mind you, she lives in Edinburgh so it wouldn't do to be choosing a weegie-based issue. Joking apart, I rather enjoyed this BaL. Marmite or not to others, the conversational format worked for me this morning. The three "finalists", as Goon 525 has already said, were no surprise but, given the quality of all three, one would hardly complain about the choice. That series of Bartók recordings which Fischer made for Philips is one of the joys of the catalogue. I'd never heard the Rattle before and was sufficiently impressed to shell out £3.55 (P&P included) for a used copy.
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Originally posted by antongould View Post
I very much enjoyed the BAL and also, shamefully, my first exposure to the work ……..
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Originally posted by antongould View Post
I very much enjoyed the BAL and also, shamefully, my first exposure to the work ……..
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