Lovely interview wasn't it ?
Sir Jeffrey Tate (1943-2017) RIP
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Yes - he also talked about the scarcity of opportunities to record opera, and posited the way forward was for opera houses to do it (I must listen again and check when the interview was first broadcast).
I think he conducted at least one opera performance I attended - but I'd have to check. I saw him, close up - on a country house visit (guided tour) in the Scottish Borders in 2016. He seemed well and as affable as came over in the interview.
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Originally posted by Cockney Sparrow View PostYes - he also talked about the scarcity of opportunities to record opera, and posited the way forward was for opera houses to do it (I must listen again and check when the interview was first broadcast).
I think he conducted at least one opera performance I attended - but I'd have to check. I saw him, close up - on a country house visit (guided tour) in the Scottish Borders in 2016. He seemed well and as affable as came over in the interview.
Yes, interesting interview indeed. I shall feel forever indebted to JT for the wonderful Ariadne auf Naxos he conducted at Covent Garden in the 80s (Jessye Norman, Kathleen Battle, and the dazzling Klimt-ian coup de théâtre at the climax) which so got to me I went 3 times... I wish he had been able to record Capriccio, as mentioned in the interview.
Never took to his Mozart; but I love his Schubert Great C Major with the Dresden Staatskapelle...
RIP"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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I was in Turin last week so had booked for the RAI concert. I thought forumistas might like to know how Jeffrey Tate’s death was marked. They clearly thought much of him there. There was a large bouquet of white lilies below the conductor’s podium and before Vilde Frang and the conductor (Gergely Madaras) entered, the orchestra’s manager (I imagine) gave a short speech (my Italian wasn’t up to following it). Orchestra and audience then stood for a minute’s silence. I was very impressed by the fact that it was a total and utterly still silence, followed, when we sat, by warm applause. During the applause at the end of the concert the conductor gestured towards the bouquet.
I was disappointed at first that the Elgar concerto was replaced by the Beethoven. But in the event I felt it was the most involving performance I’ve heard live since I heard Oistrakh. Frang was a joy and the others were right with her. A real event. The Mendelssohn Scottish wasn’t to my taste, played more as a series of four very romantic tone poems than a symphony to my ears. I missed Tate.
Steerpike
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Originally posted by Steerpike View PostI was in Turin last week so had booked for the RAI concert. I thought forumistas might like to know how Jeffrey Tate’s death was marked. They clearly thought much of him there. There was a large bouquet of white lilies below the conductor’s podium and before Vilde Frang and the conductor (Gergely Madaras) entered, the orchestra’s manager (I imagine) gave a short speech (my Italian wasn’t up to following it). Orchestra and audience then stood for a minute’s silence. I was very impressed by the fact that it was a total and utterly still silence, followed, when we sat, by warm applause. During the applause at the end of the concert the conductor gestured towards the bouquet.
I was disappointed at first that the Elgar concerto was replaced by the Beethoven. But in the event I felt it was the most involving performance I’ve heard live since I heard Oistrakh. Frang was a joy and the others were right with her. A real event. The Mendelssohn Scottish wasn’t to my taste, played more as a series of four very romantic tone poems than a symphony to my ears. I missed Tate.
Steerpike
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Originally posted by Steerpike View PostI was in Turin last week so had booked for the RAI concert. I thought forumistas might like to know how Jeffrey Tate’s death was marked. They clearly thought much of him there. There was a large bouquet of white lilies below the conductor’s podium and before Vilde Frang and the conductor (Gergely Madaras) entered, the orchestra’s manager (I imagine) gave a short speech (my Italian wasn’t up to following it). Orchestra and audience then stood for a minute’s silence. I was very impressed by the fact that it was a total and utterly still silence, followed, when we sat, by warm applause. During the applause at the end of the concert the conductor gestured towards the bouquet.
I was disappointed at first that the Elgar concerto was replaced by the Beethoven. But in the event I felt it was the most involving performance I’ve heard live since I heard Oistrakh. Frang was a joy and the others were right with her. A real event. The Mendelssohn Scottish wasn’t to my taste, played more as a series of four very romantic tone poems than a symphony to my ears. I missed Tate.
Steerpike
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'CRQ Editions' Summer releases include an 'In Memoriam' CD in which Tate conducts Rossini, Britten and Brahms from three Italian radio broadcasts. It was in Italy where he died and he seems to have conducted more concerts abroad than here in the UK, at any rate in his later years.
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