Originally posted by smittims
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Upcheering music
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Originally posted by smittims View PostAlan Civil used to tell a delightful anecdote about the famous opening of the Oberon overture. In his RPO days he was sometimes frustrated by Sir Thomas Beecham's habit of fussing about ., with spectacles etc. just before giving the downbeat , so one day Civil jumped the gun and started without him.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View Post...Music to cheer you up - need not be cheery music but a piece of music that gives you great pleasure to listen to may simply mean a brief respite from life's troubles or may improve your mood simply by being exposed to a great piece and a great performance...
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Originally posted by smittims View PostYes, one's 'first encounter' often remains a favourite. With me it's Julius Katchen in late Brahms, though I agree Kovacevitch is a classic. David Owen Norris, however,was quite disparaging in 'Building a Library' and chose a dull performance by someonge I'd never heard of.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostI think this is an important point: following the 'argument' (for want of a better word) of a piece can be absorbing, taking one out of oneself. Noticing aspects of a piece because the performer(s) has interpreted it in a different way from others: these, in a sense intellectual or cognitive, tasks do not in themselves make 'cheery music', as Barbs proposes. This indeed would be why, for me, the Goldberg Variations can be 'upcheering' because they are endlessly absorbing, notably when performers diverge in their interpretation.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View Post
That's quite common with DON BALs in my opinion - fascinatingly knowledgeable but then chooses a recording that does not thrill at all - only exception I can remember is his choice of Pires and Horowitz as runner up in D 960.
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