Originally posted by DracoM
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John Eliot Gardiner - the pros and cons...
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Originally posted by verismissimo View PostMusicians I know describe him as a bully and avoid playing for him as a consequence.
In one of the few conversations I ever had with an orchestral musician (from the RLPO), I mentioned how much I'd enjoyed Mark Wigglesworth's BBCSO relays. He commented on how unpopular he was with "some of the players". It hasn't harmed his career much has it? His many excellent recordings speak for themselves. So isn't it finally down to the musical results? What else is left from a career of performance and recording? Well, for listeners, at least!
I would refer you back to my #18, for suggestions of recent recordings to engage with, if you can. The ORR's playing on those live issues (not to mention comments from the players in the notes) suggest anything but reluctance under domination - more a devotional, impassioned commitment.
I rarely enjoyed his Proms performances during the 1990s. It took me a while to understand what he was doing, and I'll probably not return to those earlier cycles with much pleasure (though one's response to revisiting such things is never that predictable, is it? A recent Proms Missa Solemnis was marvellous, he gave us a terrific Berlioz' Roméo et Juliette last year, and I suspect I'd enjoy those Mozart Concertos with Bilson more, now that my own tastes are very much HIPPs-oriented, thanks to Brautigam & Willens, Cristofori, Schoonderwoerd etc. Perhaps the Brahms Symphonies too, after Mackerras or Manze).
So I certainly regard John Eliot Gardiner as a great, at times inspirational, conductor. I recall hearing a live VPO Haydn 96 on R3 some years ago and, to my surprise, delighting in it. I wonder if there's a treasure trove of such things out there? How that might change the view.... A shame that the Wiener Philharmoniker seem so parsimonious about their live releases. (Remember that Haydn Box with Harnoncourt, Welser-Möst, Boulez? I'd love to hear something like that, with JEG).Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 19-02-17, 16:41.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostHow often we read some comment like this about a conductor... In one of the few conversations I ever had with an orchestral musician (from the RLPO), he commented on how unpopular Mark Wigglesworth was with "some of the players".
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Is JEG a concert draw?
I attended a Prom he did in 1999 (Schumann's Scenes From Goethe's Faust) and the attendance was shocking. A virtually empty arena.
The performance was good, as far as I can remember. But all I can really recall is my astonishment that a 'name' conductor couldn't draw a crowd.
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Originally posted by verismissimo View PostAnd for me it's evident in the recordings of all three.
In the notes to the JEG live Beethoven 2/8, the ORR principal cellist, Robin Michael, comments:
"To be surrounded by such wonderful individual and collective playing by one's colleagues is a real privilege. This was yet another special and memorable project and I'm glad that this recording provides more than just the memory of it.."
Of the Beethoven 5th and 7th, ORR principal oboist Michael Niesmann says: "The members of the ORR always give their all - John Eliot Gardiner demands, inspires and gives no less - but especially during the Carnegie Hall concert we felt as if we were playing for our lives. In this wonderful concert hall the energy of Beethoven's music was all-encompassing, addictive, one of the most beautiful and intense experiences possible. I am so glad we now have a recording of this concert as a historical document."
(...And listening to them is fairly addictive, all-encompassing and memorable in itself....)Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 07-03-17, 15:38.
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Originally posted by Conchis View PostIs JEG a concert draw?
I attended a Prom he did in 1999 (Schumann's Scenes From Goethe's Faust) and the attendance was shocking. A virtually empty arena.
The performance was good, as far as I can remember. But all I can really recall is my astonishment that a 'name' conductor couldn't draw a crowd.
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Originally posted by EnemyoftheStoat View PostTo be fair, that piece is box-office suicide.
BUT - I'd imagine if Simon Rattle had been conducting, there would have been a better house?
When you think about it, there are very few 'house full' names in orchestral music.
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Originally posted by verismissimo View PostMusicians I know describe him as a bully and avoid playing for him as a consequence.
There are plenty of wonderful conductors who aren't like this and it strikes me as sad that people allow him to get away with being such a tyrant.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostI've heard musicians say similar things about what a horrible (but inspired) man he is, a bully, arrogant and liable to explode for no apparent reason.
There are plenty of wonderful conductors who aren't like this and it strikes me as sad that people allow him to get away with being such a tyrant.
Something to do with what they were creating? If they hadn't "let him get away with being such a tyrant" would the musical results have been...different/as good/worse...?...Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 03-03-17, 19:31.
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