What was your last concert?
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"I do not approve of anything that tampers with natural ignorance. Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone. The whole theory of modern education is radically unsound. Fortunately in England, at any rate, education produces no effect whatsoever. If it did, it would prove a serious danger to the upper classes, and probably lead to acts of violence in Grosvenor Square."
Lady Bracknell The importance of Being Earnest
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostWent to the Barbican last night for the LSO and Sir Simon Rattle in the Messiaen Turangalila Symphony. Terrific performance as you would expect but the LSO brass sounded much, much too loud, uncomfortably so at times, from my seat in the Circle. There seemed to be no roundness in tone, just a total blasting it out. The percussion, however, was just right, The Barbican probably isn't the ideal venue for a piece like this but the heavy brass really did need toning down, if only for the sake of everyone's hearing.
Was anyone else there last night, or for the repeat tonight? I'd be interested in any comments.
Incidentally, tonight's performance is on Radio 3 on June 30.
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View PostThey are bringing it to the Edinburgh Festival - for which I have tickets in the stalls. Although the Usher Hall acoustics are not perfect, better than the Barbican, although Sir Simon has been pretty attuned to orchestral placement as a way of mitigating the many shortcomings of the latter (middle of Rows L to P of the stalls are usually not too bad, if you can afford the prices)."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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I was also at Wednesday's Barbican Turangalîla, and also in the circle (centre-left). Two other members of our gamelan group were there - we compared notes at last night’s rehearsal. All of us did indeed find the brass rather loud (excitingly so, for me); for those of us centre-left and far left, a more serious balance issue was the quietness of the Ondes (quite the opposite problem to the balance in several recordings…), though our colleague in the centre of the circle found it ok.
The second Turangalîla I've heard in the Barbican in seven months: last November had Nicholas Collon conducting the Guildhall Symphony Orchestra (with William Bracken as a seriously impressive young piano soloist). That time, I was in the Circle right side; the brass certainly weren’t as loud as the LSO's, though it's impossible to say how much that was due to seating, and how much due to orchestra/conductor.
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Originally posted by ostuni View PostI was also at Wednesday's Barbican Turangalîla, and also in the circle (centre-left). Two other members of our gamelan group were there - we compared notes at last night’s rehearsal. All of us did indeed find the brass rather loud (excitingly so, for me); for those of us centre-left and far left, a more serious balance issue was the quietness of the Ondes (quite the opposite problem to the balance in several recordings…), though our colleague in the centre of the circle found it ok.
The second Turangalîla I've heard in the Barbican in seven months: last November had Nicholas Collon conducting the Guildhall Symphony Orchestra (with William Bracken as a seriously impressive young piano soloist). That time, I was in the Circle right side; the brass certainly weren’t as loud as the LSO's, though it's impossible to say how much that was due to seating, and how much due to orchestra/conductor.
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View PostThey are bringing it to the Edinburgh Festival - for which I have tickets in the stalls. Although the Usher Hall acoustics are not perfect, better than the Barbican, although Sir Simon has been pretty attuned to orchestral placement as a way of mitigating the many shortcomings of the latter (middle of Rows L to P of the stalls are usually not too bad, if you can afford the prices).
Sir Simon Rattle conducts the orchestra in Messiaen’s sensational Turangalîla Symphony London Symphony OrchestraSir Simon Rattle Conductor Peter Donohoe PianoCynthia Millar Ondes Martenot Messiaen Turangalîla-Symphonie Sir Simon Rattle conducts the London Symphony Orchestra in Oliver Messiaen's orchestral masterpiece, the Turangalîla Symphony.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostA composer friend (who just happened to present a BaL on the work several decades ago) and his partner made a similar comment regarding the ondes, though it was stressed that another friend of theirs who sat more centrally heard it well balanced. I guess that when it comes to the Barbican, you have to be in the right place, at the right time.
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Two days ago, at Snape Maltings. Sinfonia of London/John Wilson.
Walton: Scapino Overture
Delius: Summer Night on the River
Britten: Scottish Ballad (with Pavel Kolesnikov & Samson Tsoy)
Elgar: Symphony 2
I went mainly to hear the quirky, entertaining Britten piece but enjoyed every second of this splendid concert. What a band! John Wilson's conducting was also something special. His grip of the Elgar piece was something out of the ordinary, at least to my ears. All was enthusiastically received by a capacity audience.
TV cameras were there.
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View PostThey are bringing it to the Edinburgh Festival - for which I have tickets in the stalls. Although the Usher Hall acoustics are not perfect, better than the Barbican, although Sir Simon has been pretty attuned to orchestral placement as a way of mitigating the many shortcomings of the latter (middle of Rows L to P of the stalls are usually not too bad, if you can afford the prices).
If I do attend, I’ll probably sit in the upper circle in the low numbers where the ‘bones are masked by the hall’s architecture. Perhaps I need to hear it again…
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Originally posted by ostuni View PostI was also at Wednesday's Barbican Turangalîla, and also in the circle (centre-left). Two other members of our gamelan group were there - we compared notes at last night’s rehearsal. All of us did indeed find the brass rather loud (excitingly so, for me); for those of us centre-left and far left, a more serious balance issue was the quietness of the Ondes (quite the opposite problem to the balance in several recordings…), though our colleague in the centre of the circle found it ok.
It was noticeable that the percussion were mostly being a bit more refined than in some of the more exuberant Turangalilas I've seen over the years, probably for the sake of everyone's hearing. The brass just sounded normal for the LSO to me - i.e. prominent and with lots of front on the notes. Possibly noteworthy was that of the heavies, only the piccolo trumpet (currently the only trumpeter the LSO has), bass trombone and tuba were LSO members. Either by coincidence or as a nice touch, the first trumpet was Jon Holland who recently retired from the CBSO having been their principal trumpet since 1987 during the Rattle era, was probably appointed by him, and is presumably on Rattle's CBSO Turangalila recording.
The ondes did seem to be less prominent than usual - a relief as a previous encounter with the piece at the Barbican sat too close to its speakers had me wanting to put my fingers in my ears.
Ultimately the Barbican isn't the right place for this work. Of probably 20 live ones I've been to, the most thrilling remains Y-P Tortelier and the BBC Philharmonic at the 1996 Proms which featured some absolutely blistering brass and percussion playing. The Albert Hall is much more suitable, allowing for space around the notes and for the brass and percussion to give it maximum welly without anyone needing to take cover.
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Recently attended a concert by these guys. Four accomplished and respected (respectable ~ ?) musicians from Haringaria (sic) doing their thing and having fun. A storming genre-b(l)ending performance - the audience at Helmsley Arts Centre loved it. Catch them if you can!Last edited by Old Grumpy; 28-06-23, 17:39.
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London Chamber Ensemble
Howells: String Quartet no.3 'In Gloucestershire' - first performance of original version (1916)
Schubert: String Quintet in C, D.956
St James, Sussex Gardens, London W2 3UD
An absolute treat, this afternoon concert (free admission, donations ) today by the ensemble led by neighbour & friend Madeleine Mitchell under the aegis of the Schubert Society of Great Britain.
The Howells was fascinating and beautifully done - the slow movement transported me like nothing else recently.
The background to this first performance is remarkable. Howells first wrote the piece in 1916 but managed to leave the score on a train He promptly re-wrote it as closely as possible to the original: this is the version that was performed today. Three movements had received a private performance at the flat of Marion Scott at No. 92, Westbourne Terrace (just up the road from today’s venue) with the likes of Stanford, Gurney et al. in attendance. Today’s was the first full performance because these parts too subsequently disappeared () and have only recently been unearthed in an archive. (The version of the piece that has received performances and recordings hitherto was written in the 1920s by Howells, attempting to recall/reproduce the original but differing substantially from it, understandably)
Wonderful to hear (not least with the local historical colour adding to the frisson) - and of course an excellent live performance of the Schubert Quintet is an experience in itself…
This sort of concert is far more appealing to me these days than Proms etc… Must be getting old…."...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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Last night at Snape Maltings:
The King's Singers and Fretwork: 'Tom and Will'
The music of Thomas Weelkes and William Byrd, with new pieces by James MacMillan and Roderick Williams
A thoroughly satisfying concert. I had heard some tracks from the album bearing the same title as this concert, but in the Snape acoustic they sounded even better. It seems to me that Weelkes is a neglected figure compared with Byrd. A good deal of his best work seems to be contained in the three madrigal books published in his early 20s. His descent into alcoholism was very sad, given his early promise.
The singer who introduced Byrd's 'Praise the Lord, all ye Gentiles' said that it concluded with the finest setting of 'Amen' that he knew, and it was hard to disagree.
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Originally posted by Nick Armstrong View PostLondon Chamber Ensemble
Howells: String Quartet no.3 'In Gloucestershire' - first performance of original version (1916)
Schubert: String Quintet in C, D.956
St James, Sussex Gardens, London W2 3UD
An absolute treat, this afternoon concert (free admission, donations ) today by the ensemble led by neighbour & friend Madeleine Mitchell under the aegis of the Schubert Society of Great Britain.
The Howells was fascinating and beautifully done - the slow movement transported me like nothing else recently.
The background to this first performance is remarkable. Howells first wrote the piece in 1916 but managed to leave the score on a train He promptly re-wrote it as closely as possible to the original: this is the version that was performed today. Three movements had received a private performance at the flat of Marion Scott at No. 92, Westbourne Terrace (just up the road from today’s venue) with the likes of Stanford, Gurney et al. in attendance. Today’s was the first full performance because these parts too subsequently disappeared () and have only recently been unearthed in an archive. (The version of the piece that has received performances and recordings hitherto was written in the 1920s by Howells, attempting to recall/reproduce the original but differing substantially from it, understandablyuseful )
Wonderful to hear (not least with the local historical colour adding to the frisson) - and of course an excellent live performance of the Schubert Quintet is an experience in itself…
This sort of concert is far more appealing to me these days than Proms etc… Must be getting old….
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LSO/Sir Simon in ‘Turangalila’ in the Usher Hall at the EIF. Not sure quite how they managed to cram everyone onto the stage - the back desk of the first violins appeared to be sharing his performance space with the xylophone, for instance. Keyboards all lined up at the front of the stage with Sir S behind. Cynthia Millar very audible as a result so it was a real pleasure to hear the contribution made by the O-M to the piece. Sir Peter Donohoe, looking positively Edwardian, in great form (easy to forget what a fine pianist he is). Brass carefully placed so the trombones not too overpowering. Percussion audible throughout. I’m still not sure that the music isn’t just on the wrong side of being trashy but it makes a glorious noise. The exuberance, energy, passion and joy were all brought out magnificently - I cannot imagine hearing a better performance, helped by the really rather good acoustics of the hall.
Very fine performances of the Janacek 1st SQ and LvB Op 130/Op 133 earlier. Mark-Anthony Turnage’s latest SQ possibly not quite in the same league but well worth hearing (it was its first public outing so he duly appeared with trademark blue pork pie hat at the end).
A very enjoyable day’s music in a very unsummery Edinburgh.
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