Originally posted by Pulcinella
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Phones in concerts
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostAs it happens, I was at a lunchtime recital today where the introductory preamble included "Thank you for switching your mobile phones and other devices off for the duration of this concert".About 5 minutes in someone started filming on their phone, and after a muttered discussion at the back of the venue a person was dispatched to tap on the shoulder and ask him to desist.
What part of "switch", "phone" and "off" had not been understood I wondered.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View PostI prefer Proust's approach : he stayed at home and listened (live!) to concerts over the phone - the théâtrophone
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Originally posted by Roger Webb View Post
Gabriel Pierné's Op. 36 maybe?
"Dans la mesure où la réalité m’a servi, mesure très faible à vrai dire, la petite phrase de cette Sonate, et je ne l’ai jamais dit à personne, est (pour commencer par la fin), dans la soirée Sainte-Euverte, la phrase charmante mais enfin médiocre d’une Sonate pour piano et violon de Saint-Saëns, musicien que je n’aime pas. (Je vous indiquerai exactement le passage qui vient plusieurs fois et qui était le triomphe de Jacques Thibaut.) Dans la même soirée un peu plus loin, je ne serais pas surpris qu’en parlant de la petite phrase j’eusse pensé à l’Enchantement du Vendredi Saint. Dans cette même soirée encore quand le piano et le violon gémissent comme deux oiseaux qui se répondent j’ai pensé à la Sonate de Franck surtout jouée par Enesco (dont le quatuor apparaît dans un des volumes suivants). Les trémolos qui couvrent la petite phrase chez les Verdurin m’ont été suggérés par un prélude de Lohengrin mais elle-même à ce moment-là par une chose de Schubert. Elle est dans la même soirée Verdurin un ravissant morceau de piano de Fauré."
"To the extent that I drew on reality, a very limited extent, in fact, the little phrase from this Sonata, and I’ve never told anyone this before, is, at the Saint-Euverte soirée (to begin at the end), the charming but mediocre theme from a Violin and Piano Sonata by Saint-Saëns, a composer I dislike. (I’ll show you the precise passage, which recurs several times and was a triumph for Jacques Thibaud.) At the same soirée, a little further on, it wouldn’t surprise me if, talking of the little phrase, I hadn’t been thinking of the Good Friday Spell. Still at the same soirée, when violin and piano lament like two birds calling to one another, I was thinking of Franck’s Sonata, especially as played by Enesco (Franck’s Quartet appears in later volumes). The tremolo passages played over the little phrase at the Verdurins’ were suggested by the Prelude to Lohengrin, but the phrase itself at that moment by a piece by Schubert. At the same Verdurin soirée, it becomes a ravishing piece by Fauré."
Proust, Selected Letters: Volume 4: 1918–1922, ed. by Philip Kolb and trans. by Joanna Kilmartin (London: HarperCollins, 2000), pp. 39–41.
(I note that he does not mention Pierné...)
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post
Proust himself wrote (letter to Jacques Lacretelle, 20 April 1918) -
"Dans la mesure où la réalité m’a servi, mesure très faible à vrai dire, la petite phrase de cette Sonate, et je ne l’ai jamais dit à personne, est (pour commencer par la fin), dans la soirée Sainte-Euverte, la phrase charmante mais enfin médiocre d’une Sonate pour piano et violon de Saint-Saëns, musicien que je n’aime pas. (Je vous indiquerai exactement le passage qui vient plusieurs fois et qui était le triomphe de Jacques Thibaut.) Dans la même soirée un peu plus loin, je ne serais pas surpris qu’en parlant de la petite phrase j’eusse pensé à l’Enchantement du Vendredi Saint. Dans cette même soirée encore quand le piano et le violon gémissent comme deux oiseaux qui se répondent j’ai pensé à la Sonate de Franck surtout jouée par Enesco (dont le quatuor apparaît dans un des volumes suivants). Les trémolos qui couvrent la petite phrase chez les Verdurin m’ont été suggérés par un prélude de Lohengrin mais elle-même à ce moment-là par une chose de Schubert. Elle est dans la même soirée Verdurin un ravissant morceau de piano de Fauré."
"To the extent that I drew on reality, a very limited extent, in fact, the little phrase from this Sonata, and I’ve never told anyone this before, is, at the Saint-Euverte soirée (to begin at the end), the charming but mediocre theme from a Violin and Piano Sonata by Saint-Saëns, a composer I dislike. (I’ll show you the precise passage, which recurs several times and was a triumph for Jacques Thibaud.) At the same soirée, a little further on, it wouldn’t surprise me if, talking of the little phrase, I hadn’t been thinking of the Good Friday Spell. Still at the same soirée, when violin and piano lament like two birds calling to one another, I was thinking of Franck’s Sonata, especially as played by Enesco (Franck’s Quartet appears in later volumes). The tremolo passages played over the little phrase at the Verdurins’ were suggested by the Prelude to Lohengrin, but the phrase itself at that moment by a piece by Schubert. At the same Verdurin soirée, it becomes a ravishing piece by Fauré."
Proust, Selected Letters: Volume 4: 1918–1922, ed. by Philip Kolb and trans. by Joanna Kilmartin (London: HarperCollins, 2000), pp. 39–41.
(I note that he does not mention Pierné...)
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Originally posted by Roger Webb View Post
Er, yes Ed. What do you think?
I do think that Gabriel Pierné's violin sonata is a strong runner. Charming but mediocre may be adjectives we are happy to apply to GP , particularly after we've heard his March of the Little Leaden Soldiers. However, he was a major French figure when Proust was active, giving, for instance, the first concert performance of IS's Firebird.
Here's a published review of Pierné's Violin Sonata after its performance at the Edinburgh International Festival:
'Perhaps Frenchmen cannot write "Sonata Form" according to the German textbooks, but, after all, why should they when they can overwhelm our senses with sonorities which steal over us like drugged perfumes?'
"Sonorities which steal over us like drugged perfumes": heady stuff and, just the ticket for MP.
I discount Saint-Saens, whose first sonata is backwards looking and almost neo-classical. Hahn is a possibility but his chamber music was little played. Fauré's first sonata is a worthy competitor and MP knew it well but coming from a raging heterosexual composer would it have been 'soul music'?
If I knew that GP was a gay man, his sonata would tick my box. But... I cannot establish Gabriel's sexual proclivities.
So, I'll join the Dragons' Den investors in saying ,"I'm out!" and leave a cloak of secrecy around our 'vinteuil'.
Last edited by edashtav; 05-05-24, 18:31.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View Post
To be clear - for those who may have chosen not to follow the link - Martha G's piece goes further than the issue of either just the CBSO, or indeed classical music concerts in general, to explore the issues of phone culture, generational differences - and, crucially, marketing folks' attempts to pander (as I would see it) to phone culture and its ramifications. She's worth a read, IMV!
...The strict etiquette of the classical concert, like the opera and the ballet, has long been part of its essential atmosphere, its mystique. To experience this world for the first time is to be inducted into its codes and practices; in learning when to clap, what to wear, when not to distract everyone else, the newbie becomes the sophisticate. Times change, but the classical concert does not. Yet these sanctified institutions are now flinging all this aside to accommodate a culture that boringly suffices [surfaces?] everywhere else.... [my bold emphases]
But apparently CR3* would not agree with this.
I now rest my case (maybe )
[* every time I type this I think of R2D2]
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View Post
To be clear - for those who may have chosen not to follow the link - Martha G's piece goes further than the issue of either just the CBSO, or indeed classical music concerts in general, to explore the issues of phone culture, generational differences - and, crucially, marketing folks' attempts to pander (as I would see it) to phone culture and its ramifications. She's worth a read, IMV!
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post
Proust himself wrote (letter to Jacques Lacretelle, 20 April 1918) -
"Dans la mesure où la réalité m’a servi, mesure très faible à vrai dire, la petite phrase de cette Sonate, et je ne l’ai jamais dit à personne, est (pour commencer par la fin), dans la soirée Sainte-Euverte, la phrase charmante mais enfin médiocre d’une Sonate pour piano et violon de Saint-Saëns, musicien que je n’aime pas. (Je vous indiquerai exactement le passage qui vient plusieurs fois et qui était le triomphe de Jacques Thibaut.) Dans la même soirée un peu plus loin, je ne serais pas surpris qu’en parlant de la petite phrase j’eusse pensé à l’Enchantement du Vendredi Saint. Dans cette même soirée encore quand le piano et le violon gémissent comme deux oiseaux qui se répondent j’ai pensé à la Sonate de Franck surtout jouée par Enesco (dont le quatuor apparaît dans un des volumes suivants). Les trémolos qui couvrent la petite phrase chez les Verdurin m’ont été suggérés par un prélude de Lohengrin mais elle-même à ce moment-là par une chose de Schubert. Elle est dans la même soirée Verdurin un ravissant morceau de piano de Fauré."
"To the extent that I drew on reality, a very limited extent, in fact, the little phrase from this Sonata, and I’ve never told anyone this before, is, at the Saint-Euverte soirée (to begin at the end), the charming but mediocre theme from a Violin and Piano Sonata by Saint-Saëns, a composer I dislike. (I’ll show you the precise passage, which recurs several times and was a triumph for Jacques Thibaud.) At the same soirée, a little further on, it wouldn’t surprise me if, talking of the little phrase, I hadn’t been thinking of the Good Friday Spell. Still at the same soirée, when violin and piano lament like two birds calling to one another, I was thinking of Franck’s Sonata, especially as played by Enesco (Franck’s Quartet appears in later volumes). The tremolo passages played over the little phrase at the Verdurins’ were suggested by the Prelude to Lohengrin, but the phrase itself at that moment by a piece by Schubert. At the same Verdurin soirée, it becomes a ravishing piece by Fauré."
Proust, Selected Letters: Volume 4: 1918–1922, ed. by Philip Kolb and trans. by Joanna Kilmartin (London: HarperCollins, 2000), pp. 39–41.
(I note that he does not mention Pierné...)
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Originally posted by edashtav View Post
I doubt that Proust wanted us to identify the composer of his theme given the number of false leads he suggested. We're in a similar situation to Elgar's enigma mystery.
I do think that Gabriel Pierné's violin sonata is a strong runner. Charming but mediocre may be adjectives we are happy to apply to GP , particularly after we've heard his March of the Little Leaden Soldiers. However, he was a major French figure when Proust was active, giving, for instance, the first concert performance of IS's Firebird.
Here's a published review of Pierné's Violin Sonata after its performance at the Edinburgh International Festival:
'Perhaps Frenchmen cannot write "Sonata Form" according to the German textbooks, but, after all, why should they when they can overwhelm our senses with sonorities which steal over us like drugged perfumes?'
"Sonorities which steal over us like drugged perfumes": heady stuff and, just the ticket for MP.
I discount Saint-Saens, whose first sonata is backwards looking and almost neo-classical. Hahn is a possibility but his chamber music was little played. Fauré's first sonata is a worthy competitor and MP knew it well but coming from a raging heterosexual composer would it have been 'soul music'?
If I knew that GP was a gay man, his sonata would tick my box. But... I cannot establish Gabriel's sexual proclivities.
So, I'll join the Dragons' Den investors in saying ,"I'm out!" and leave a cloak of secrecy around our 'vinteuil'.
They moved in different circles from Proust, Hahn etc but it's the general fin de circle 'feel' in these, and other composers of the time - for example Lili Boulanger's violin/piano works that evoke Paris of those times - did you know she shared a concert at Salle Pleyel with Delius? I wonder how they got on!
When in Paris I stay in the flat (in the 14th) of a relative of one of Pierné's publishers (Heugel) - they published many composers of the time - but I have soft spot for Pierné.
Latest obsession is with Jean Cras, do you know the Suite en duo, for flute and harp? Juliette Hurel made a lovely recording on Timpani 1C 1179.
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