Recently I played in the band for a school show. Before the concert, during the interval and after the concert, they played a professional recording of the same show. Not only do the ears never get a rest - it does, as you say, show up the live performers.
"Happy clappers" counterblast: J. Duchen on "how to be a nice audience"
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostRecently I played in the band for a school show. Before the concert, during the interval and after the concert, they played a professional recording of the same show. Not only do the ears never get a rest - it does, as you say, show up the live performers.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostRecently I played in the band for a school show. Before the concert, during the interval and after the concert, they played a professional recording of the same show. Not only do the ears never get a rest - it does, as you say, show up the live performers.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostSome people just cannot stand silence. At the Olympics they play loud background music when nothing else is happening, just as they do in 20-20 cricket. At the Proms, when the music stops for a momentary pause, some people feel they have to fill it up with noise. Mendelssohn tried to overcome this by linking his movements. Conductors do the same by rushing into the next movement, which is a pity, as it removes that precious moment of silence.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostWhat I think is worse is when they do it whilst the audience is still clapping eg Thomas Dasgaard at the beginning of the finale of Tchaikovsky Pathetique. Yes the crowd were wrong but why compound it!
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostBut until Roger Wright agrees to put a request into the Proms programmes that audiences might restrain their applause until the end of the work, ...
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostI'm quite sure your wish will be granted - sadly.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostChris Small has gone as far as to suggest that Tchaikovsky was in fact quite happy in his life at the time of composing the "Pathetique";
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI think it would be difficult to say what expectations he would have had of his audience.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostHe wasn't so happy after the first perfomance, though we do not know the reasons. We only speculate.
Indeed. And again, we only speculate. Perhaps basing our assumptions on our own preferences is a form of arrogance.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostWhich, hopefully, will be never! How insulting to assume that Tchaikovsky did not expect just such an outbreak of approbation at that very point.
This must be a bit of a problem for those who can't abide stick-in-the-mud tradition. Where do you run when the applause becomes a tradition?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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JohnSkelton
Originally posted by french frank View PostWell, it could OTOH be insulting to assume that he did expect it.
This must be a bit of a problem for those who can't abide stick-in-the-mud tradition. Where do you run when the applause becomes a tradition?
Purely personally I wouldn't put inter-movement applause as all that much of an irritant though I wouldn't do it myself, and I can easily block out someone briefly whispering to someone during a performance, etc. I find more difficult people getting terribly annoyed about applause / disruption and making a point of it by shushing. I agree there's something a bit formulaic about some of the inter-movement applause - just another place where people think they ought to clap. But if it's spontaneous excitement / enthusiasm I find it easy enough to switch back on again (though appreciate others feel differently). Perhaps the worst thing for classical music enthusiasts would be if everyone other than the diehards, the connoisseurs, the people who know their Klemperer from their Karajan and can give you the date of each of their recordings of the Eroica stop going to classical concerts.
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