Originally posted by Conchis
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Simon Rattle Talks About Karajan....
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Originally posted by Once Was 4 View PostPeter Gibbs became leader of the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra. He died in very strange circumstances which, to my knowledge, have never been explained (does anybody know differently?) He had his own airoplane in which he took off one day and disappeared. I understand that the plane was never found but that Gibbs' body was found some months later in a tree. Pathologists said that he had died not long before he was found. Where was the plane? where had he been in the interim? and why was he found in that tree? Have these questions ever been answered?
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Originally posted by Conchis View PostJust noticed this blog entry from Robert Meyer, recounting the Philharmonia's US/Canada tour with Karajan, the one which included the 'Peter Gibbs incident'.
https://robertmeyer.wordpress.com/20...h-von-karajan/
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostI take it you are familiar with https://www.byersmusic.com/resources...20rev.2017.pdf .
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostI take it you are familiar with https://www.byersmusic.com/resources...20rev.2017.pdf .
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... isn't the evidence that syphilis was a 'New World' disease, introduced to Europe by Columbus's returning sailors - the first written records of an outbreak of syphilis in Europe occurred in 1494. Unlikely, then, that David wd have been a sufferer...
[ ... Michelangelo [1475-1564] is another question, of course.]
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More relevant, Michelangelo is known to have paid grave robbers to deliver corpses to him so that he could dissect them to study anatomy. It would be more likely that these corpses would have been from common graves bearing lower class individuals and not the Medici women sent to nunneries. Presumably lower socioeconomic status men would be more likely to frequent men and women of easy virtue and thus more likely to be infected.
Any other point of Medicine you care to debate, Vints?
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostI take it you are familiar with https://www.byersmusic.com/resources...20rev.2017.pdf .
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'Repellent' certainly doesn't describe classic recordings like the Philharmonia Falstaff, or the Tchaikovsky ballet suites, which are marvels of music-making, but I feel that the later BPO days were impressive rather than moving for the most part. Karajan obviously commanded the respect of almost all his peers, but when it comes to bursts of inspiration I always return to Furtwangler.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostI take it you are familiar with https://www.byersmusic.com/resources...20rev.2017.pdf .
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