Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie
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BaL 14.04.12 Mozart Symphony no 41 "Jupiter"
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Originally posted by vinteuil View PostI enjoyed this BAL. It was good to be reminded how very good the Hogwood/AAM is - on my shelves, but haven't listened to for years, must remedy - so intelligent, lithe, alert.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... well, I have ONE box set of the Haebler concertos on LPs - and I gave another boxed set to my brother as a Christmas present - but to have SIXTEEN sets does seem a trifle excessive...
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Originally posted by MickyD View PostI quite agree, Vinteuil. I think the Hogwood cycle in general is very underrated - to me it was and still is, a breath of fresh air.
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Originally posted by Alison View Post#28 Good shout, Nethersage !
Any views on the Norrington Bruckner 9 ??
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It seemed very odd to me that on the one hand MC praised the Boult/ LPO because it ( allegedly) gave us 'what Mozart wrote' ( i.e. no extra dynamic tinkerings, speed adjustments, etc.) and then in the end chose the Norrington / Stuttgart, which sounded like it was bristling with extraneous 'interpretative tweaks'.
How I do wish that reviewers would lump all the 'old instrument' recordings together maybe at the beginning or the end of their pronouncements on 'modern instrument' recordings. Flitting from modern to period orchestras, sometimes only a few seconds apart, makes for some truly horrible lurches of pitch.
As far as I know, the Hogwood, Gardiner, Pinnock and Immerseel orchestras play at A=430 - exactly 'in the crack' between modern A=440 and 'baroque' A=415 pitch, so, about half a semitone / quarter of a tone flat.
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How I do wish that reviewers would lump all the 'old instrument' recordings together maybe at the beginning or the end of their pronouncements on 'modern instrument' recordings. Flitting from modern to period orchestras, sometimes only a few seconds apart, makes for some truly horrible lurches of pitch.
As far as I know, the Hogwood, Gardiner, Pinnock and Immerseel orchestras play at A=430 - exactly 'in the crack' between modern A=440 and 'baroque' A=415 pitch, so, about half a semitone / quarter of a tone flat.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostSurely it would have been better for us and for the reviewer to have been given a narrower brief, e.g. period instrument performances only.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostA bit that the views of those who composed them, eh?
My point is that with the speed obsessed Norringtons of this world, the slow movements are effectively quicker than the outer movements as the "slowness" is compensated for by the composer with an abundance of demisemiquavers.
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Alps. I wasn't trying to plug either twangy or non-twangy. Just making the point that sometimes a reviewing task is just too wide to be possible. But I agree a two-way top tip would have been good.
(I'm always reminded of a line from The Cat in Red Dwarf: "Man, he's so un-hip his ass'll drop off")
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostNo evidence whatever in this instance. K.551 was probably never performed in Mozart's lifetime, and there's only the vague "Andante Cantabile" , which can mean whatever the conductor wants it to mean.
My point is that with the speed obsessed Norringtons of this world, the slow movements are effectively quicker than the outer movements as the "slowness" is compensated for by the composer with an abundance of demisemiquavers.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostSeems me the obsession with speed, or in this case lack of it, lies somewhere other than with Norrington.
Having listened to my favourite of the three versions I have (Pinnock) I decided that he does not use enough strings to counterbalance even the woodwind. I therefore downloaded Norrington (no longer a FLAC virgin now!) and listened carefully. His slow movement tempo (ie the crotchet pulse) seems perfectly ok for Adagio cantabile to me. I'm a bit uncomfortable only with his first movement tempo, which is more like Allegro con brio than Allegro vivace.
I then opened the score and scanned the first movement. I was astonished to find that the only dynamic markings are piano and forte, with no gradations at all. Did Mozart really intend it to be performed in that way? Norrington clearly thinks not, and passages like bars 9-23 (Wagner's "rattling of dishes at a banquet" in the wrong hands) sound really musical with the use of nuances within the basic forte dynamic. His slight crescendo in bar 1 can be seen in the same light and I am not a bit disturbed by it.
I am pleased that he does not do repeats in the da capo of the Minuet, and he almost convinces me that it's right to do the second repeat in the finale.
I therefore urge all to listen on Monday with open minds.
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