Originally posted by zola
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Leeds Piano Competition 2018
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Is Ms Berezovsky related to Boris (no not that one) or is it a common E. European surname?
Balls OTOH is a very English name:
Ex-shadow Chancellor Ed Balls, BBC broadcaster Sophie Raworth and impressionist, actor and writer Alistair McGowan played piano in Leeds train station yesterday afternoon (September 12), watched by commuters. The event was one of a series of events that form part of the Leeds International Piano Competition, the finals of which take place on Friday and Saturday.Last edited by ardcarp; 16-09-18, 10:18.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostIs Ms Berezovsky related to Boris (no not that one) or is it a common E. European surname?
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Gosh, doesn't she look young and innocent! The Mozart was the subject of BAL this weekend.
Just been looking back at her earlier stages in the Leeds. Great choice of repertoire, including R. Strauss (not usually a pianist's composer)
Messiaen (beautifully played Vingt Regards) Scriabin and Ligeti. Yes that Beethoven was stonking. I hope she has a great future in spite of being a 'mere' semi-finalist.Last edited by ardcarp; 16-09-18, 14:57.
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Haven't read this thread up to date (because I've not yet heard the R3 broadcasts of the Final and don't know the result) so not sure if this has been mentioned. Certainly no one's commented on it today since the broadcast: the 90 minute highlight programme this to which TV coverage has been relegated (https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episod...018-highlights)
Thought I'd take a quick look: first on, Eric Liu.... LvB PC4 - "first movement only"... ok, well it's a highlights programme... then, after the opening bars, the music fades to an interview with the player...
There really are some numbskulls involved with musical broadcasting these days."...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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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Caliban View Post.................the 90 minute highlight programme this to which TV coverage has been relegated.........
Thought I'd take a quick look: first on, Eric Liu.... LvB PC4 - "first movement only"... ok, well it's a highlights programme... then, after the opening bars, the music fades to an interview with the player...
There really are some numbskulls involved with musical broadcasting these days.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View Postmusical equivalent of c. interruptus.....you're on the edge of your seat waiting for dum-diddle-um-dum, dum-diddle-um-dum, instead you get....Petroc Trelawny .
"...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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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostThe TV programme was a great example of how to produce a really dumbed down music "show". Voice over the music, cuts, fades etc. I hope I can pick up some of this on medici still.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View Post....and just the slow movement of Beethoven 1st PC - musical equivalent of c. interruptus.....you're on the edge of your seat waiting for dum-diddle-um-dum, dum-diddle-um-dum, instead you get....Petroc Trelawny .
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I have eventually caught up with most of the performances in different rounds, all in HD video, free on medici.tv and without the game show trappings of BBC4.
It was good fun, finding out who had won say the chamber music prize, and going back to that person's performance in previous rounds.
I was very impressed by the way the organizers have linked with the University (Honorary degree for Lang Lang, etc) and medici.tv
You can see and hear it all, in good quality, for 3 years, until the next competition. (maybe subscriptions will kick in after a time)
Coverage is worldwide - good for the competitors and the medici funding, and attracts new sponsors.
The winner now gets an agent, as well as cash and gigs.
All the competitors now have to include a modern piece, and a chamber music performance - fascinating to see who communicates well with the other musicians. Preliminary rounds are in New York, Berlin, and Singapore - widens the field and the audiences.
The numbers for the audience prize are enormous - so unsurprisingly the Chinese finalist received most votes. There are a lot of very keen pianists in China.
Much of this would not have been possible if the whole event had been produced by the BBC (tv), even with worldwide post-event programme sales.
I am very pleased that the OTT parochial BBC tv presentation was absent. I liked the Radio 3 presentation, which was praised at the impressive awards ceremony, but of course all is lost after 30 days. In my view the medici.tv link has enabled the competition to be rejuvenated, and the famous friendly atmosphere of the Leeds competition has not been lost in the process.
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Originally posted by Beresford View PostI have eventually caught up with most of the performances in different rounds, all in HD video, free on medici.tv and without the game show trappings of BBC4.
I shall probably now go back and watch the Liu concerto performance on Medici, and his chamber music Dvorak - he really did stand (sound) head and shoulders better than the others. What a musician.
Not tempted to re-listen to the winning Häring chamber performance as the cellist sounded to me distinctly sub-standard (put my teeth on edge ). I do want to hear Anna Geniushene's Shostakovich Quintet again though...."...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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