Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie
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Your musical homeland
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Originally posted by cloughie View Post...and surely part of the rich pageant of life and the listening of music in particular if every performance of every work was identical, assuming we know categorically what the composer’s intentions were (and many changed their minds - the Sainted Bruckner of the Forum probably). I listened to some hipp Telemann on Sarah’s Sunday Morning and it sounded dull muddy and frankly boring - but there are those who presumably like it so!
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I was somewhat startled to listen to the Chinese folk song about trees just now on Breakfast and to experience a sudden and overwhelming sense of homecoming.
I have no Han ancestry, but my mother was born in Harbin, in the Russian exile colony there, in 1923. Odd, to say the least.
I am trying to learn Mandarin otherwise Putonghua but it is horribly difficult.
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Oakapple
If I could only listen to one composer then it would be Prokofiev. I certainly would like to see his symphonies 2, 3, 4 and 6 played more often. If people find the first movement of the 2nd too hard to stomach (somewhat relentless - a little more light and shade would have helped but not difficult compared with a lot of music written since) the theme and variations of the second movement take you on a very rewarding tour and I think it could work as a stand-alone piece.
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Originally posted by Oakapple View PostIf I could only listen to one composer then it would be Prokofiev. I certainly would like to see his symphonies 2, 3, 4 and 6 played more often. If people find the first movement of the 2nd too hard to stomach (somewhat relentless - a little more light and shade would have helped but not difficult compared with a lot of music written since) the theme and variations of the second movement take you on a very rewarding tour and I think it could work as a stand-alone piece.
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Originally posted by Oakapple View PostIf I could only listen to one composer then it would be Prokofiev. I certainly would like to see his symphonies 2, 3, 4 and 6 played more often. If people find the first movement of the 2nd too hard to stomach (somewhat relentless - a little more light and shade would have helped but not difficult compared with a lot of music written since) the theme and variations of the second movement take you on a very rewarding tour and I think it could work as a stand-alone piece.
My favourite Prokofiev cycles by miles - I hardly bother with any others now - but I may finally investigate the Jurowski/Pentatone 2&3 soon....IIRC HD was very impressed with it....Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 20-04-20, 13:47.
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