Originally posted by Caliban
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Schubert on 3
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Don Petter
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No authority I can find suggests torture, which (strange as it may seem) would have been anachronistic for Metternich's Vienna.
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Carmen
Would be interesting to know what the listening figures are for this week of programming outrage. Can this be ascertained?
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Originally posted by aeolium View PostDeutsch, quoted in Alfred Einstein's biography of Schubert, mentions that Schubert 'escaped with a black eye' though it's not clear if this was received during the arrest or in custody. Metternich's Vienna was a pretty oppressive place, so the latter would not have been surprising.
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Originally posted by Carmen View PostWould be interesting to know what the listening figures are for this week of programming outrage. Can this be ascertained?
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Originally posted by Don Petter View PostNicely put, Caliban."...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..."
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Originally posted by DracoM View PostI think you can safely bet that they will be 'very satisfying' and 'impressive'. In fact, the press releases have possibly already been written.
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I had the misfortune to catch some of "Play Schubert for me" at the weekend. Sarah Mohr-Pietsch at one stage broke to 'interview' a "Schubert Virgin", some rather tiresome female presenter from radio 5 Live (apparently), who had been handed a pile of CDs sometime earlier and asked to report back her findings (why, I asked myself aloud, who the hell cares?). She then proceeded to relate, to Ms Mohr-Pietsch's apparent edification, how she'd put the music on and listened to it through a filter of bawling kids. Aural "wallpaper" was how she described it. Her most illuminating point to relate was that she had enjoyed the Gloria from a mass setting because it was sunny outside and she thought it was nice. Utter twaddle.
Mohr-Pietsch, in a vain attempt to draw something meaningful from this banal observation, then went on to advance "so I think we're beginning to realise there are actually two Schuberts, one a serious composer one has to listen to in our otherwise silent sitting rooms or the concert hall..." (the sentence thankfully trailed off at that point, though I suspect the intended conclusion was likely to have been 'and the one it is perfectly OK to listen to through a cacophony of screaming children, washing machines and general chatter'.) Risible stuff."Let me have my own way in exactly everything, and a sunnier and more pleasant creature does not exist." Thomas Carlyle
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Originally posted by Karafan View PostI had the misfortune to catch some of "Play Schubert for me" at the weekend. Sarah Mohr-Pietsch at one stage broke to 'interview' a "Schubert Virgin", some rather tiresome female presenter from radio 5 Live (apparently), who had been handed a pile of CDs sometime earlier and asked to report back her findings (why, I asked myself aloud, who the hell cares?). She then proceeded to relate, to Ms Mohr-Pietsch's apparent edification, how she'd put the music on and listened to it through a filter of bawling kids. Aural "wallpaper" was how she described it. Her most illuminating point to relate was that she had enjoyed the Gloria from a mass setting because it was sunny outside and she thought it was nice. Utter twaddle.
Mohr-Pietsch, in a vain attempt to draw something meaningful from this banal observation, then went on to advance "so I think we're beginning to realise there are actually two Schuberts, one a serious composer one has to listen to in our otherwise silent sitting rooms or the concert hall..." (the sentence thankfully trailed off at that point, though I suspect the intended conclusion was likely to have been 'and the one it is perfectly OK to listen to through a cacophony of screaming children, washing machines and general chatter'.) Risible stuff."...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..."
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