I was hoping "The programme is available for the next four weeks" might prompt some reflection by Radio 3.
Christopher Hogwood has died
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Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View PostI was hoping "The programme is available for the next four weeks" might prompt some reflection by Radio 3.
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Originally posted by Bryn View Post128kbps mp3 bears no comparison to BBC Radio 3's 320kbps aac.
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Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View PostI'll accept your assurance for that, but could one hear those particular CH performances elsewhere in better sound? I heard them on the car radio during a long drive, and even at that quality they were very welcome.
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There is a letter concerning CH in today's Graun deserving a much wider exposure:
"Christopher Hogwood (Obituary, 24 September) was not only an early musician but also an early activist against piped music. A model to us all, he would carry and occasionally bring into play a small pair of wire-cutters. Once, in a Cambridge restaurant, he asked if the inevitable Vivaldi might at least be turned down. As the waiter went off to attend to the request, a diner at the next table leant over and murmured sympathetically “We’re not musical either.”
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amateur51
Originally posted by hafod View PostThere is a letter concerning CH in today's Graun deserving a much wider exposure:
"Christopher Hogwood (Obituary, 24 September) was not only an early musician but also an early activist against piped music. A model to us all, he would carry and occasionally bring into play a small pair of wire-cutters. Once, in a Cambridge restaurant, he asked if the inevitable Vivaldi might at least be turned down. As the waiter went off to attend to the request, a diner at the next table leant over and murmured sympathetically “We’re not musical either.”
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James Jolly included an hour of CH recordings in his Sunday Morning show today (19 Oct, 1000 - 1100) which CH fans might enjoy. I had time only to listen with care to one item, the Mozart D minor piano concerto K466 with Robert Levin as soloist on a modern reproduction fortepiano and CH conducting the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment.
I had recently heard Levin live with the BSO in LvB Piano Concerto No 1, and had to ask a member of the orchestra in the interval about the cadenzas, which I hadn't known would be improvised. Levin improvises in the Mozart, and, as Jolly remarked, the first movement cadenza is particularly fine. I found the rather 'big band' sound of the OAE a bit of an uncomfortable contrast with the fortepiano, which would nowadays, I guess, be differently balanced,
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