If anyone has come across the broadcast of this, I'd be most grateful if they'd let me know before it's too late to Listen Again.
The Glass Harmonica
Collapse
X
-
Tags: None
-
-
As I pointed out earlier, the unnumbered symphonies are not mentioned in the RT listings. But they did play Symphony no. "42" in a morning programme a couple of days ago. It really isn't much help not to list works being played. It's not as if to say any would want to listen to the radio all day for 12 days, just on the off-chance... Particularly with the unbending style of just one composer.
I might even like Birtwistle after this.
There are 2 kinds of glass harmonica - the more playable has a series of revolving glass discs, making it easier to chance notes quickly. But some players prefer the traditional wineglass setup, on the basis of superior sound.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostThere are 2 kinds of glass harmonica - the more playable has a series of revolving glass discs, making it easier to chance notes quickly. But some players prefer the traditional wineglass setup, on the basis of superior sound.
the instruments made by Finkenbeiner are IMV far superior to any set of table top glasses
GFI. Inc. offers a full line of laboratory glassware and quartzware to meet your research and manufacturing needs.
also this lot are very good
De sa création en 1990 et jusque 2015 l’Orchestre TransparenceS s’est produit en quintet. Désormais il évolue en solo, duo et/ou trio. Pour sa forme quintet on consultera la rubrique . L’ensemble instrumental TransparenceS a été un invité régulier de festivals prestigieux, de prestations artistiques, festives et culturelles variées. Invité régulier de saisons culturelles […]
Comment
-
-
tony yyy
The Bruno Hoffman recordings used to be the standard (only?) ones. I don't know if they've been superseded.
Comment
-
The first recording of the work I heard, in an LP of Mozart's Masonic music, had the celesta as the solo instrument (played by Peter Maag) - it was only quite a bit later that I got to hear the work played with a glass harmonica (probably in the Hoffman recording). It would be good to hear in concert.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by tony yyy View PostThe Bruno Hoffman recordings used to be the standard (only?) ones. I don't know if they've been superseded.
The glass harmonica is one of those non-electronic instruments that doesn't fit into the normal scientific categories of aerophones, chordophones, membranophones and idiophones. It has certain affinities with idiophones, but has even been given a class of its own - "aquaphones".
Comment
-
-
tony yyy
Yes, that's the one, doversoul - it's a gorgeous quintet for glass harmonica, flute, oboe, viola and cello, although I think there's also a separate adagio
Comment
-
Tony
Ah! Glad to know that I was thinking of the same work, and by Bruno Hoffman. I owned his LP and thought it was the most beautiful sound in the world. I posted this on the old R3 MBs but there is another recording: by one Thomas Bloch on Naxos, with the adagio. I played it once and put it away. It wasn’t the glass harmonica itself that made the music so magical but it was Hoffman. I should have held on to my memory.
As for this fest, I expect it was played on the harp or some such and quietly left to slip away.
Comment
-
-
tony yyy
I think one of the many trailers/adverts said that tomorrow is to be devoted to 1791 so perhaps it will be broadcast then. I still can't find any trace of of it on the schedule.
At the risk of seeming obsessed by this, I feel it it would be a shame not to give the piece at least some prominence as, slight as it is in some ways, for me, at least, it contains some of the essence of Mozart's genius. Even with an unconventional choice of instruments, as far as I'm aware, he achieves a wonderful blend and texture to produce a thing of beauty.
Comment
-
Panjandrum
Originally posted by aeolium View PostDid this work surface at all - does anyone know whether it was played and if so when?
Strange that it should prove so elusive when there were lots of performances of some works. I almost lost count of the number of broadcasts of the Magic Flute overture, for instance.
Comment
Comment