Originally posted by Conchis
View Post
Music on BBC4. Don't die of shock.....
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by cloughie View PostWhat do you suggest to get young people listening to good classical orchestral music?
Don't try and steer them towards it. They'll make their own minds up.
Anyone who is seriously into music will move beyond rock/pop eventually, though it took me until I was (about) 23 to do so.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Conchis View PostDon't try and steer them towards it. They'll make their own minds up.
Anyone who is seriously into music will move beyond rock/pop eventually, though it took me until I was (about) 23 to do so.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Conchis View PostDon't try and steer them towards it. They'll make their own minds up.
Anyone who is seriously into music will move beyond rock/pop eventually, though it took me until I was (about) 23 to do so.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by cloughie View PostYes but that was then - now, there is so little exposure to classical music that with more people in the past it will never happen!
It was 1990 and Mr. Ridley had made some disparaging comments about the Germans running the E.U. When I tend in to Nicky Campbell's late night radio programme on R1 (yes, hard to believe I used to listen to R), he played Ride Of The Valkyries as a sort of 'present' apropos Ridley's comments. Although I'd heard it before and knew what it was, it immediately struck me as being a million times better than anything else I'd heard that day. The next day, I purchased highlights from the Karajan Ring on cassette (no CD player yet!) and 'started at the top' as far as serious music goes. It took me a while, and a fair bit of immersion, but after a couple of months, I'd 'got it'.
I think the point may be that if you're forced or 'directed' toward something by someone else, you'll either resist it or give up. But if you just follow your own natural curiosity, you'll make more of an effort.
That said, I still struggle with the later Coltrane.....
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI think that Britten wrote far better examples of "Variations" Form, ardy (the Frank Bridges and A Boy Was Born for starters) and of his individual handling of the orchestra. "Absolute best" is standard BBC mush that really undervalues Britten's considerable achivements elsewhere - BUT, given the nature of the commission, I think that the Vars & Fugue on a Theme by Purcell does show an extraordinarily imaginative way of demonstrating to new listeners the timbres of the individual instruments and of the choirs to which they belong. (And, yes - I love that concluding Fugue, too.)
I agree also that modern day kids don't want to be 'spoken down to' in a way that past outings of YPGTTO were presented. But we have to see things in the context of their time. Kids in the 1950s/60s/70s did not see anything unusual in being 'informed' by an 'expert' using the 'didactic method'.
But Variations and Fugue on a Theme of Purcell is a much-to-be-preferred title.
Comment
-
-
I have a recording of Sean Connery doing the narration for the Purcell Fugue and Variations: he's a strange, but rather effective, choice.
It's coupled, inevitably, with Peter and the Wolf: Connery gives the most viscerally violent account of the narration I've ever heard. Maybe that should have been expected!
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Conchis View PostI have a recording of Sean Connery doing the narration for the Purcell Fugue and Variations: he's a strange, but rather effective, choice.
It's coupled, inevitably, with Peter and the Wolf: Connery gives the most viscerally violent account of the narration I've ever heard. Maybe that should have been expected!
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostAnd I'll raise you a Roger Moore on that.
(Look at those eyebrows! Was on Talking Pictures the other day. Absolute rubbish )
Naughty host: ... back on topic....
I enjoyed (in a not particularly informative but quite entertaining way) the programme with James O'Donnell and William Sitwell talking about and performing Walton. Only saw part - will have to catch up"...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..."
Comment
-
Comment