Tripe ?
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Since norm refers to the grants they receive, here is the most recent report.
I have no idea how this ( their finance) compares with other comparable organisations, but on the face of it, an £18m pa grant for what is the country’s leading arts venue seems reasonable enough.
I’m not all that keen on the current model for arts funding( not that I have a better alternative ready to go , but as it goes, it doesn’t seem profligate.
Some dubious names among the non execs though..........I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Anyone here able to comment on the RFH pre and post the 2007 Modifications (advised by no less an acoustician than Lawrence Kirkegaard)....?
Anyway "current models for arts funding" are out the bloody window now.....
Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 11-06-20, 20:12.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostAnyone here able to comment on the RFH pre and post the 2007 Modifications (advised by no less an acoustician than Lawrence Kirkegaard)....?
Anyway "current models for arts funding" are out the bloody window now.....
https://www.theguardian.com/music/20...-uk-conductors
( Everything is out the window now, it seems.....)I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostAnyone here able to comment on the RFH pre and post the 2007 Modifications (advised by no less an acoustician than Lawrence Kirkegaard)....?
I did several things in the hall both before and after.
I know several folks who were involved and met the acousticians and went to some of the acoustic tests etc
SO the quick answer is that the acoustics are now much more even and resonant.
Before (due to the way that some of the building was made ..... it's easier to put panels on a wall if you put battens on it first but that makes a bass trap etc ) the volume level dropped off massively under the balcony... now less so
The acoustic diffuser that was above the stage didn't work and (after much wrangling with the 20th Century society as it was part of the listing) has gone.
On the stage you can now actually hear what other people are playing... almost impossible before BUT for those ensembles who play there a lot it might have been part of what gave them their unique sound?
and so on etc
Lebrecht knows F-all about it and has been soundly taken apart by those who do on social media.Last edited by MrGongGong; 12-06-20, 07:27.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostAnyone here able to comment on the RFH pre and post the 2007 Modifications (advised by no less an acoustician than Lawrence Kirkegaard)....?
I've attended a few concerts in the RFH over the years, and it's always sounded ok, but in 1985, I auditioned a large scratch orchestra to perform at the hall on Easter Monday, along with a vast choir for a new work. As I was involved in orchestral part copying and was orchestral manager for the few days leading up to the performance, I wasn't going to be doing any actual playing in the performance, but in the end, grabbed a barely legible vocal score and learnt it fast for the RFH final run through. That was the day I discovered the hall's deficiency. I felt as though I were singing in a field, with socially distanced players and singers around me, who I could hear, but felt isolated from. I'm sure the others felt like that too. But the recording made of the event sounded great.
The Wikipedia article says the enhancement was switched off in 1998, so I'm presuming the premiere of Elgar/Payne Symphony no. 3 was the only time I heard a concert there without electronic wizardry in action. I haven't been there since. I suppose I should, but I've been spoilt by the Sage and Symphony Hall.
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My RFH experiences are confined to listening from 1961 onwards so I've listened to the sound of the hall from many different seats in its several acoustic treatments but to be honest, as an audience member and not a performer it's always sounded pretty much the same to me, generally poor in the terrace under the balcony, much better in the grand tier but best in the middle stalls, although most interesting in the Choir simply through feeling more part of the performance. I've always liked the place, its where I've heard the orchestral concerts that I've most enjoyed, especially those given by the incomparable Pierre Monteux and the LSO.
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