I hope I'm not the only one who wishes Radio 3 would find a more controlled version of the 100mph Bartered Bride overture they keep playing. It sounds like George Szell can't wait to get it over with and get home early.
'Bartered Bride' overture
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Originally posted by Rover_KE View PostI hope I'm not the only one who wishes Radio 3 would find a more controlled version of the 100mph Bartered Bride overture they keep playing. It sounds like George Szell can't wait to get it over with and get home early.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
That’s a bit of an orchestra display piece with conductors vying to get faster and faster. There must be other opera overtures around - this one is so over played.
Why they don't play the occasional overture by Cherubini or Auber (who wrote some stunners, of equal brevity to the Smetana) completely defeats me. Presumably they don't know 'em, so they don't exist.
(Not that I object to hearing The Bartered Bride myself. It's infinitely preferable to the diurnal exposure of Rhapsody in Blue, which ought to be chucked into Room 101, never to make us scream again.)Last edited by Master Jacques; 19-06-24, 10:03.
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Originally posted by Rover_KE View PostI hope I'm not the only one who wishes Radio 3 would find a more controlled version of the 100mph Bartered Bride overture they keep playing. It sounds like George Szell can't wait to get it over with and get home early.
Friends would ask him for recipes, which he would provide with one ingredient missing.
That is a thrilling overture, but I once had the misfortune to sit through the entire lengthy opera in Plymouth Theatre Royal: possibly the most boring hours spent with opera thrust upon me.
Rover_KE, you should avoid the famous LP of short orchestral works recorded in1965 by Mravinsky and his Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra. It opens with an unbelievably fast overture to Glinka's "Ruslan And Lyudmila", but one can't help admiring the extreme virtuosity with which it and the Ov to the Marriage of Figaro are played. Both Szell and Mravinsky held long-term chief conducting posts in an era when maestri could act like musical dictators. Hungarian conductors in particular come to mind: Solti (his Ruslan is fast!), Reiner and Dorati - too much hot paprika?!
Listen if you dare ...
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Originally posted by Keraulophone View PostThat is a thrilling overture, but I once had the misfortune to sit through the entire lengthy opera in Plymouth Theatre Royal: possibly the most boring hours spent with opera thrust upon me.
For me it's to Smetana what Barchester Towers is to Trollope - delightful, but not representative of their mature work. Both Dalibor and The Kiss are amongst the greatest operas ever written, by my reckoning.
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Originally posted by Keraulophone View Post
Szell was a noted cook so he might have had someting in the oven that needed turning off!
Friends would ask him for recipes, which he would provide with one ingredient missing.
That is a thrilling overture, but I once had the misfortune to sit through the entire lengthy opera in Plymouth Theatre Royal: possibly the most boring hours spent with opera thrust upon me.
Rover_KE, you should avoid the famous LP of short orchestral works recorded in1965 by Mravinsky and his Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra. It opens with an unbelievably fast overture to Glinka's "Ruslan And Lyudmila", but one can't help admiring the extreme virtuosity with which it and the Ov to the Marriage of Figaro are played. Both Szell and Mravinsky held long-term chief conducting posts in an era when maestri could act like musical dictators. Hungarian conductors in particular come to mind: Solti (his Ruslan is fast!), Reiner and Dorati - too much hot paprika?!
Listen if you dare ...
https://youtu.be/wfJ0K_qy9_8?si=gm4vcc_Yqk9lQlvH
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Originally posted by Keraulophone View PostFriends would ask him for recipes, which he would provide with one ingredient missing. ... Rover_KE, you should avoid the famous LP of short orchestral works recorded in1965 by Mravinsky and his Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra. It opens with an unbelievably fast overture to Glinka's "Ruslan And Lyudmila", ...
Going more on topic - the overture to R & L used to be the most frequently placed work on Through the Night - or so it seemed - don't know whether that is still the case. It was probably the same recording each time.
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At one time it was 'Zadok the Priest', The Strauss op. 7 serenade, 'Gretchen am Spinnrade' and the Rigoletto paraphrase that were overplayed on Radio 3 in the mornings. We're often told that the presenters are very knowledgeable but unless it's just laziness some of their knowledge appears shallow to me.
This is why 'Through the Night' is so good. I'm sure we hear a wider range of composers and works there than in daytime Radio 3 programming.
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostCould we add Shostakovich’s Festive Overture and Bernstein’s Candide, please? Great pieces but not all the time!
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Originally posted by LMcD View Post
... and the Adagietto from Mahler's 5th Symphony, the overture to 'La Forza del Destino', Butterworth's 'The Banks of Green Willow', the 2nd movement of Mozart's 21st Piano Concerto and the opening movement of Bteethoven's 'Moonlight' Sonata.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostLooks like we have responses from politicians, MJ, as noone has answered the question - OK, there was no ‘?’ But two of my long term favourite recordings are Kertesz and Reiner.
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Originally posted by mopsus View PostThrough the Night used to have some pieces that came round more often than you'd expect - apart from the overture to 'Ruslan and Lyudmila' there was Strauss' first horn concerto and music by Hellendaal (an 18th-century Dutch composer who is buried in Cambridge).
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