Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro
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Orchestration and transcriptions
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostVery true, I have that CD too, but I do not like Schoenberg's use of the bass drum in his transcription of Bach's prelude & Fugue in Eb, "ST ann", in the prelude. Not what I would have done. I would have put either the tuba and or double basses, for instance.
Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia Orchestra play Sir Edward Elgar's orchestral transcription of Bach's Fantasia and Fugue in C minor for organ (recorded 19...
Strange how you get a lot of Elgar in his Bach arrangement, with shades of "Gerontius," "Enigma" and parts of the 1st Symphony!
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I always think of organ works by various different composers as being probably the most difficult instrument to change into another medium
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostIf I were basing that view on Stokowski's awful muddy attempts, then I would agree. But actually much organ music is quite easy to transcribe, as orchstras and bands have similar sustaining properties to organs. I think some piano music is really hard to transfer to an orchestra, especially if its principal structure is broken or arpeggiated chords. So for instance Mussorgsky' Pictures cry out for orchestral treatment (IIRC, even Henry Wood made an excellent shot at it) so also Debussy's Claire de Lune, but a Chopin piece such as the Fantaisie Impromptu in C# minor leaves you wondering where...and how...to start.
in the Slatkin / Chandos booklet notes, Skrowaczewski, who also orchestrated the same piece, is quoted as saying that the organ "was a kind of precursor to the big orchestra." This is shown by the specification of the organ in St. Bartholomew's, New York, where Stokowski was organist before he took to the orchestral podium. The book entitled "Stokowski and the Organ" by Rollin Smith refers to the "many specimens of 'strings' stops ... the reeds are very smooth and brilliant" and in his various orchestrations Stokowski aimed for the kind of sounds he conjured up in the St. Bartholomew's organ loft.
Purists may not like what he did but that's just a matter of taste and opinion. In any case, I doubt if anyone would describe this arrangement of a keyboard Prelude in B minor as remotely "muddy" ... It's simplicity itself! ...
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Leaving aside what one thinks of Stokowski's Bach arrangements, what do you think of the downbeat that Dutoit gives at the start of the Toccata and Fugue transcription? Specifically, how do the players manage to come in almost a second after the beat, rather than on it? It's not a sync fault between video and audio, as is evident from the shots of the orchestra, but all the shots of Dutoit show him to be well ahead of the beat, so to speak, so it seems a wonder that they're all spot on, at any rate as far as ensemble is concerned ...
This famous arrangement is being published to mark Leopold Stokowski's birthday (he was born on 18 April 1882). His orchestral transcription of Bach's Toccat...
Now see Stokowski himself, batonless, in this rehearsal of Leonore No. 3, stopping the players at the start with "Attack together!" ...With him, the players are exactly on the beat, not after it, so it's interesting to compare Stokowski's downbeat with Dutoit's. I can only assume that the players for Dutoit work out when to come in during his rehearsals, in the same way that the players do for Stokowski ...
Last edited by seabright; 05-05-17, 17:07.
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostI am in two minds about Stowkowski's arrangements. But Joachim Raff's arrangement of the Chaconne by Bach, is something else, again from the recording mentioned by Cali, above.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostAny views on Bantock's arrangements - his Wachet Auf and Sheep may safely graze are superb with wonderful bass- lines running through them.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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As a trumpeter I can be fairly defensive about arrangements where the brass medium is concerned. After all, it's not our fault the instruments (apart from the sackbut) weren't fully chromatic until the early-mid 19th century, but there are some things that should be left well alone. Organ transcriptions are fair game up to a point (Not just Bach - The English Brass Ensemble recorded a stupendous transcription by Paul Archibald of Widor's entire Symphony No. 5 in the 1990s). However, a few years ago the Washington Symphonic Brass recorded an arrangement of part 1 of Le Sacre du Printemps. Obviously there are some 'brass friendly' sections but a French horn cannot substitute for the opening bassoon solo. At the end of the arrangement (as I said - just the first part) I just thought 'why'? Just because it CAN be done, it doesn't mean to say it should be.
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Originally posted by Dave Payn View PostAs a trumpeter I can be fairly defensive about arrangements where the brass medium is concerned. After all, it's not our fault the instruments (apart from the sackbut) weren't fully chromatic until the early-mid 19th century, but there are some things that should be left well alone. Organ transcriptions are fair game up to a point (Not just Bach - The English Brass Ensemble recorded a stupendous transcription by Paul Archibald of Widor's entire Symphony No. 5 in the 1990s). However, a few years ago the Washington Symphonic Brass recorded an arrangement of part 1 of Le Sacre du Printemps. Obviously there are some 'brass friendly' sections but a French horn cannot substitute for the opening bassoon solo. At the end of the arrangement (as I said - just the first part) I just thought 'why'? Just because it CAN be done, it doesn't mean to say it should be.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by Dave Payn View PostJust because it CAN be done, it doesn't mean to say it should be.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostAny views on Bantock's arrangements - his Wachet Auf and Sheep may safely graze are superb with wonderful bass- lines running through them.
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Originally posted by Dave Payn View PostAs a trumpeter I can be fairly defensive about arrangements where the brass medium is concerned. After all, it's not our fault the instruments (apart from the sackbut) weren't fully chromatic until the early-mid 19th century, but there are some things that should be left well alone. Organ transcriptions are fair game up to a point (Not just Bach - The English Brass Ensemble recorded a stupendous transcription by Paul Archibald of Widor's entire Symphony No. 5 in the 1990s). However, a few years ago the Washington Symphonic Brass recorded an arrangement of part 1 of Le Sacre du Printemps. Obviously there are some 'brass friendly' sections but a French horn cannot substitute for the opening bassoon solo. At the end of the arrangement (as I said - just the first part) I just thought 'why'? Just because it CAN be done, it doesn't mean to say it should be.
"The President's Own" United States Marine Band performs Gustav Holst's "The Planets," Opus 32, transcribed by Merlin Patterson, on Sunday, Feb. 28, 2016, at...
And here are the Washington Symphonic Brass in the 'Dance of the 7 Veils' ...
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