Many years ago, Radio 4 (it may even have been the old 'Home Service') had a weekly slot called 'Music To Remember' which featured a complete recording of a classical work. I'd heard classical 'pops' - the William Tell Overture, Eine Kleine Nachtmusik etc. - but on this occasion I suddenly became aware of a wonderful surge of sound - a huge sigh, possibly a burst of anguish. It was the 2nd movement of Elgar's 2nd symphony. That proved to be my real introduction to the many delights of classical music. Would other Forum members like to share their 'breakthrough' work and the circumstances in which they heard - or saw - it?
That magical 'breakthrough' moment....
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My father was a merchant seaman who was able to take his family on voyages. In 1976/77 we left Bideford and embarked on a 6 month cruise around the globe that took us through the Panama Canal via Baton Rouge and then to Japan and Australia. At that point in my life I was just getting interested in classical music and since my father had a few classical cassette tapes, (quite a new technology in those days), I played them over and over. The one tape I remember was a CfP disc of the Grieg Piano Concerto c/w selections from the 'Peer Gynt' suite. Peter Katin was the pianist with the LPO under Sir John Pritchard. (Actually, I came across the Gramphones original review from, iirc, 1975, and they were pretty sniffy about it!)
Alas, that recording has never made it to cd although I still have my father's original CfP tape with his name on DYMO tape on it. Anyway, that was probably my breakthrough moment.
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It was at primary school, the teacher played the March from the Nutcracker Suite and I was hooked. The brass, the woodwind and the swirling strings and the atmospheric cymbals.
Many years later I heard the same music sitting in the RFH choir seats and I still marvelled at the excitement of it all.
The recording was also CfP, Philharmonia/Malko.
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It was early in 1960. I was 10 years old, and there was a Sunday evening children's radio programme about classical music on the BBC Home Service (now Radio 4). I liked the bit of Beethoven I heard, so my father played me a 78 rpm record of the opening movement of Mozart's 40th symphony. I was transfixed by this, and wanted to hear it every day. Later, the other two discs turned up, so I got to know the whole symphony. Whilst still at primary school, I had acquired the miniature score of the work.
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostThe one tape I remember was a CfP disc of the Grieg Piano Concerto c/w selections from the 'Peer Gynt' suite. Peter Katin was the pianist with the LPO under Sir John Pritchard. (Actually, I came across the Gramphones original review from, iirc, 1975, and they were pretty sniffy about it!)
Alas, that recording has never made it to cd although I still have my father's original CfP tape with his name on DYMO tape on it. Anyway, that was probably my breakthrough moment.
My breakthrough was being taken to a local concert as a school outing aged 13 and hearing Dvorak's 'New World' symphony - loved the power and excitement generated by the full orchestra in the climaxes.
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I was probably about 12 and my brother had the Monteux/BSO recording of Tchaikovsky's Symphony No 6 (he also had Beethoven 5, the 1812 Overture and the Polovtsian Dances from Prince Igor. Big collection). It was the finale that I was transfixed by, as being something that held my entire attention for minutes on end , blocking out everything else, no fidgeting or talking. That was the discovery of something much larger … (in which Tchaikovsky now seldom figures).
It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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My mother took me to the Winter Gardens in Bournemouth to hear the Messiah when I was a boy (11 or 12? Not sure). I'm not sure how much of it went home, but I can still remember the soprano (Isobel Baillie I think) singing 'I know that my redeemer liveth'. I think I was open-mouthed, astonished and captivated, that someone could stand there and fill the whole huge space with such a beautiful sound...
Probably the real breakthrough moment was later, the BSO again, in Sibelius 2nd Symphony (Silvestri perhaps?). An adolescent by then, I'd go about exclaiming, 'if only Beethoven or Mozart could have written real music, like Sibelius!' I was greatly helped by excellent notes in the programme (a Julian Budden, I think), which enthused about the music and linked it to Finnish landscapes, I think. Later his programme notes won me over to Mozart PC 25.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostI was probably about 12 and my brother had the Monteux/BSO recording of Tchaikovsky's Symphony No 6 (he also had Beethoven 5, the 1812 Overture and the Polovtsian Dances from Prince Igor. Big collection). It was the finale that I was transfixed by, as being something that held my entire attention for minutes on end , blocking out everything else, no fidgeting or talking. That was the discovery of something much larger … (in which Tchaikovsky now seldom figures).
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostMy father was a merchant seaman who was able to take his family on voyages. In 1976/77 we left Bideford and embarked on a 6 month cruise around the globe that took us through the Panama Canal via Baton Rouge and then to Japan and Australia. At that point in my life I was just getting interested in classical music and since my father had a few classical cassette tapes, (quite a new technology in those days), I played them over and over. The one tape I remember was a CfP disc of the Grieg Piano Concerto c/w selections from the 'Peer Gynt' suite. Peter Katin was the pianist with the LPO under Sir John Pritchard. (Actually, I came across the Gramphones original review from, iirc, 1975, and they were pretty sniffy about it!)
Alas, that recording has never made it to cd although I still have my father's original CfP tape with his name on DYMO tape on it. Anyway, that was probably my breakthrough moment.
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... like wot I wrote back in 2011 -
Originally posted by vinteuil View Posti think I was about nine or ten - perhaps 1960-1961 - taken to a concert at the Guildhall in Bath - front row, left hand side, feet away from the performers - Monteverdi's il Combattimento di Tancredi e Clorinda - I was completely entranced by the noise of the harpsichord (in hindsight, a completely anachronistic 18th century Kirckmann - but for Bath in 1960, not bad... [harpsichordist - Edward Malins, a friend of my father... ]) - and from then onwards a complete convert to plucked instruments, the early music movement with all that it implies (as Kipling put it*)...
* As Easy as A.B.C. [1912]
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View Post...the First movement of the PC. Conductor was Odd Gruner Haegge—I think- and a Norwegian Orchestra. The PC movement hooked me so I bought an lp of the complete work with the same performers—can’t remember the Soloist now—and began exploring other Composers.
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Originally posted by gradus View PostI wonder if the same pieces would still attract youngsters to classical music. Do primary teachers still buy records (or the current equivalent) to play to their class as mine did?
That last point is relevant - my wife had so much music activity going on in that school that it fell to the principal menace to all enterprising and dedicated teachers - The New Head. Mrs CS had managed to convince a Science/Sport head and get full backing, then emerged from a period of a frankly unbalanced head to succumb, after much rear-guard action to an example of pure ignorance. The new head didn't want music to the extent it was happening - it highlighted the rather meagre achievements in art, drama etc. In a zero sum perspective, it had to be detracting from the survival criteria for head teachers - maths, science and literacy and of course music is elitist to boot despite the wide curriculum and the unremitting effort to engage with and support ethnic and other minority childrent (also those from homes which were just plain poor).
We are convinced the school's music has to be in a decline - the days of cello, viola, violin and double bass players in quantity will be numbered, the choir will likely end up a sad rag taggle, the samba band will be no more. Coming back to the point, they might just get their powerpoints as after all the school has boxes to tick for OFSTED.
(Having said that, a tale from a local primary - OFSTED inspectors arrived on a day where there was some (pre-timetabled) music activity worth seeing, but they would not be persuaded to give it 5 minutes of their time. Says it all really).
Its all in the hands of head teachers - Gove put it there - "here's the powers, you've got the budget - I want the results" (in maths, science and literacy that is). Rattle and his ilk have a big fight on their hands to bring about change in current circumstances, where Secondary heads are also ditching arts provision to balance budgets with rising costs.
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Being raised by musical parents - my mum had graduated as a LRAM in the 1920s and broadcast for the BBC in the 1930s, my dad liked to self-accompany on our black-lacquered upright Bluthner, singing mainly 19th century parlour songs - music enterd the veins before I was aware of any particular moment of awakening to classical music per se, more of historical and stylistic breakthroughs at various points.
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I got pretty much hooked early on in life. Probably by Nutcracker excerpts or Finlandia, both of which were favourites from my father's small collection of 78s. He was mainly into early 20th century Italian opera arias. I was not. At around 6 or 7 I got taken to The Firebird (as ballet, rather than concert performance) but it was later hearing the Symphony in Three Movements which really opened my ears to Stravinsky. I think I would have been around 8 at that time.
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