Originally posted by amateur51
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RIP John Shirley-Quirk
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostAnd the row of spring onions (weeds most likely!) that will be nourished eventually by our own personal stardust, of course
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amateur51
Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostHave you read "We know you're busy working but we thought you woulsd't mind if we just dropped in for a minute" (or similar) by Edmund Crispin? You'll get the analogy if you read it (in the collection Fen Country).
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostLovely recommendation Pabs - I'm just off to a well-known bookselling website
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostI think I saw him in Schoenberg's "Survivor from Warsaw" with Simon Rattle and CBSO too
JS-Q did the Schoenberg before Tennstedt's LPO Mahler 5 on Dec 13 1988 and what a pity that this never made it on to the CD or DVD of that concert."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by french frank View PostNostalgia: I've just got this LP on ebay - I got rid of mine with my old turntable. But now I have another turntable Suspect I paid rather less than £6 when I bought it brand new (slightly manky sleeve but, mine probably had too. ...):
I believe also that the Songs of Travel was available on CD - but not for long, as my local library had it and I thought of "liberating" it. Sadly I didn't, and it's no longer in the library catalogue. The Saga LPs are hard to track down in CD versions.
This link might be of interest, however - http://themusicparlour.blogspot.co.u...s-vaughan.html
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Rather touching. My ebay LP arrived this morning and it had a large sheet of braille tucked inside; and what I thought was a torn sleeve was actually a white braille label. Still, the LP doesn't seem to have suffered. Glorious to hear that voice again.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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The NYT has a somewhat belated, but very nice, obit for JS-Q:
The Guardian's tribute mentioned his degree in chemistry, but it wasn't until I read the NYT article that I realized how far he had proceeded in that career line until making the switch to music.
(Guardian tribute, for the record: http://www.theguardian.com/music/201...-shirley-quirk)
I unfortunately never saw JS-Q live, but have heard him many times on record and liked what I heard. His recordings of Walton's Belshazzar's Feast and RVW's A Sea Symphony particularly stand out. He also served Michael Tippett well on The Vision of St. Augustine and The Ice Break, in addition to the various recordings of Britten opera. The closest I would have gotten, in the Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon sense, is hearing his son Benjamin Shirley-Quirk with the Oberlin College Choir once in Cleveland, as the chorus in a Cleveland Orchestra performance of JSB's Cantata No. 56, " Ich will den Kreuzstab gerne tragen", with Thomas Quasthoff as the baritone soloist, and FWM on the podium:
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