Do Current Conductors Measure Up To The Greats Of The Past?
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI hear the reopening of a very large can of worms there. But: composers in general don't "have to settle for" less than what they "would. ideally have wanted"; they are inspired by, and write idiomatically for, what is available to them. Some people seem to have very strange ideas about how composers think!
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Originally posted by DracoM View PostWhy is Scandinavia producing some of the most dynamic conductors on the scene?
Genuione question.
Seriously, I believe that there is a lot of money put into music in those Northern countries as opposed to the parsimonious, make do and mend philosophy in this country
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostSeriously, I believe that there is a lot of money put into music in those Northern countries as opposed to the parsimonious, make do and mend philosophy in this country
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View Post
I keep thinking of The Brandenburg Project, (Prom 29/30, Sunday August 5) and of how few listeners here bothered to attend to it or comment... it took up most of a Sunday (devotional in the best non-denominational sense!) with its marvellous interleaving of vivacious, freshly read presentations of the most familiar classical masterpieces with contemporary inspirations taking wing from them, none of which anyone would have heard before......
(It was an extraordinary experience for me - sonically, emotionally, spiritually; I didn't need to go to a concert hall to get it.)
Why was this a thrilling, unpredictable, spontaneous prospect to so few? Why was it not more popular here?
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Originally posted by Conchis View PostI am somewhat sceptical of the HIPP movement because, while it might be 'interesting' hear, say, Die Zauberflote played with the size of orchestra Mozart would have worked with and with the instruments used in his time, I'm unconvinced the performance is 'better' for being 'more authentic'. And I don't agree that what the composer had to settle for is the same as what the composer would, ideally, have wanted.
You're very brave. I skirt round the issue.
My issue with some (but by no means all) HIPP musicians/advocates is that they take entrenched positions based on circumstantial evidence, and can be highly intolerant of differing viewpoints.
Human nature, I suppose.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View Post
You're very brave. I skirt round the issue.
My issue with some (but by no means all) HIPP musicians/advocates is that they take entrenched positions based on circumstantial evidence, and can be highly intolerant of differing viewpoints.
Human nature, I suppose.
HIPP does not seek to establish 'what the composer would have ideally have wanted' - that's quite impossible. Rather I would suggest it is as Richard puts it downthread; composers being inspired and writing idiomatically for what's available [and establishing as far as possible, what was available, the conventions etc and replicating them]
And I'm not sure what it is that's so sensitive that you must skirt 'round the issue. If some people are entrenched, I'm against them too and happy to say so. But we wouldn't be saying much.
But if you're saying that HIIP is entrenched and based on circumstatial evidence, I'd say you're wrong. the HIPP 'movement' has moved on and adapted quite a lot over the last 30 plus years, even if you haven't.
It's not a question of this or that way, and no other. There are lots of ways to play old music. I'm happy that we have lots of different approaches to listen to.Last edited by Beef Oven!; 19-08-18, 17:38.
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I've heard JEG\s version of Symphonie Fantastique, which - we're told - is closer to Berlioz' version than Karajan's. And I prefer Karajan's.
I'm sure my life is enriched for 'the option' of listening to the 'raw intonation' of a late 20th century orchestra trying to sound like a mid-19th one but, for my listening pleasure, I'll opt for a big, well-funded 20th century orchestra playing 19th century repertoire like a big, well-funded 20th century orchestra would play it!
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Anyway, isn't 'authenticism' dead as a force in music?
It was a big deal in the late eighties/early nineties and a cynical part of me (that's a fairly big part) still thinks it was just a ploy to sell CDs. But none of the conductors involved were able to draw big audiences (one of he most pitifully attended Proms I ever attended was presided over by JEG) and a lot of those conductors were deeply unpopular with the orchestras they conducted (to the extent that some of them had to form their own bands).
I think the wheel is coming full circle and audiences now want to hear 'big band' versions of Mozart et al, rather than the slimmed-down (sometimes anorexic!) stuff they've been fed on for nearly thirty years.
At some point in the near future, it's not beyond the bounds of possibility that Mozart, Beethoven, Haydn et al will be cloned and will be given the chance to listen to their own works performed by orchestras since, say, 1914. It would be very amusing if they vastly preferred Furtwangerl, Karajan, Walter and Klemperer to the HIPP crowd.
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Originally posted by Conchis View PostAnyway, isn't 'authenticism' dead as a force in music?
Just look at the number of things like this
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostIt's not a question of this or that way, and no other. There are lots of ways to play old music. I'm happy that we have lots of different approaches to listen to.
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Originally posted by Conchis View PostAnyway, isn't 'authenticism' dead as a force in music?
Originally posted by Conchis View PostIt was a big deal in the late eighties/early nineties and a cynical part of me (that's a fairly big part) still thinks it was just a ploy to sell CDs. But none of the conductors involved were able to draw big audiences (one of he most pitifully attended Proms I ever attended was presided over by JEG) and a lot of those conductors were deeply unpopular with the orchestras they conducted (to the extent that some of them had to form their own bands)
Originally posted by Conchis View PostI think the wheel is coming full circle and audiences now want to hear 'big band' versions of Mozart et al, rather than the slimmed-down (sometimes anorexic!) stuff they've been fed on for nearly thirty years.
Originally posted by Conchis View PostAt some point in the near future, it's not beyond the bounds of possibility that Mozart, Beethoven, Haydn et al will be cloned and will be given the chance to listen to their own works performed by orchestras since, say, 1914. It would be very amusing if they vastly preferred Furtwangerl, Karajan, Walter and Klemperer to the HIPP crowd.
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