Originally posted by BBMmk2
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Non-native conductors
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Originally posted by Maclintick View PostIt's an interesting question. Can only the Czech Phil play Dvorak, or the VPO Johann Strauss ? For some the answer might be in the affirmative, but Prokofiev, who was widely-travelled in the West & returned to the USSR in the late autumn of 1934 having been denounced along with Stravinsky as a "bourgeois cosmopolitan" by the Soviet authorities, would have been very familiar with the sonorities of European & American orchestras, unlike DSCH, who spent most of his life in the USSR.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostTurning this question on its end I often wondered why Claudio Abbado as MD of the LSO played little British music.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostBut the LSO did play plenty of British music under other conductors during that period, so he probably felt there was no need for him to wade into unfamiliar repertoire that people had quite fixed ideas about. Look at the way Sinopoli was treated when he conducted Elgar.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostBut the LSO did play plenty of British music under other conductors during that period, so he probably felt there was no need for him to wade into unfamiliar repertoire that people had quite fixed ideas about. Look at the way Sinopoli was treated when he conducted Elgar.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostHow was Sinopoli treatedI do not believe, as some of my colleagues evidently do, that one can dismiss Sinopoli as a musician of no account. Plainly, he is a highly intelligent conductor who looks at a score and gives us what he finds there, with no pre-conceptions. But he has mistaken Elgar's nobilmente for Bruckner's maestoso. (...) He turns the Larghetto into a dirge, draining it of its noble anguish, and in the first movement all Elgar's indications of vivace, animato, impetuoso are ignored because the basic pulse is too languid. Sinopoli has no conception, it would seem, of the energy in Elgar's music. He sees only the tragedy and brings it into the foreground. (...) the art of interpreting an Elgar symphony is to cohere all those short melodic repetitions and sequences into a spontaneous whole which then sounds like a broadly conceived panoramic canvas. This is what has eluded Sinopoli. From him we get the trees, but not (as yet) the wood.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostI remember he was very often given a very hard time by London critics when he was at the Philharmonia. I'm sure you can find plenty of evidence for that if you're interested in looking for it. For now, this is from the Gramophone review of his ELgar 2nd Symphony recording: Which comes across, to me at least, as "bloody Italians, coming over 'ere and misinterpreting our precious English music"! Not that I care much about Elgar; but maybe Abbado thought it wasn't worth the effort.
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Some admirers of Sinopoli on these boards - I recall Beef O in particular. I have listened to his Elgar, and happily, but can't claim it was with a critical mindset. But the received opinion that I recall, is that he was treated unfairly in respect of his performances of British music. Critics can be a partisan bunch in my estimation - and not always so very objective (as in never upset the Ben Britten / Peter Pears axis etc etc).
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Originally posted by Cockney Sparrow View PostSome admirers of Sinopoli on these boards - I recall Beef O in particular. I have listened to his Elgar, and happily, but can't claim it was with a critical mindset. But the received opinion that I recall, is that he was treated unfairly in respect of his performances of British music. Critics can be a partisan bunch in my estimation - and not always so very objective (as in never upset the Ben Britten / Peter Pears axis etc etc).
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I've moved these posts to this new thread, as we're moving off-topic.Last edited by Eine Alpensinfonie; 11-01-22, 13:19.
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Didn’t Klemperer refuse to conduct the Enigma Variations at the Festival of Britain ?
There have of course been other non-native conductors who conducted plenty of British music - Haitink ,Menuhin come to mind , Mitropoulos and Bernstein conducted some VW symphonies , HVK seems to have been a fan of The Planets etc.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostDidn’t Klemperer refuse to conduct the Enigma Variations at the Festival of Britain ?
There have of course been other non-native conductors who conducted plenty of British music - Haitink ,Menuhin come to mind , Mitropoulos and Bernstein conducted some VW symphonies , HVK seems to have been a fan of The Planets etc.
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