'Our Lady of Paris'
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amateur51
Originally posted by jean View Post
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostI clicked on that link jean only to find myself face-to-face with another Miss Marple looky-likey - sans chapeau on this occasion
This prog is recorded for weekend-siesta listening
"...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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Simon
Originally posted by jean View Post
I knew where the word tenor originated, but I'd no idea that motet came from "mot". Nor did I know that polyphony began at Notre Dame with the cathedral canons.
I'm not sure that the Parisian builders were the most technically gifted in the world in the latter half of the C12th: there are a few buildings on England that (IMO) could provide justification for a challenge to that statement!
It's always good to hear Charpentier: a shame there wasn't more. Similarly Berlioz.
Well worth hearing for an interesting, if (necessarily and understandably) superficial summary of French music.
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Whilst I sort of enjoyed the programme and SRB's usual bonhommie, I thought the content rather disorganised and unfocused. The Leonin/Perotin stuff was more or less lifted from his TV series...then blink and he's talking about Berlioz. He got side-tracked into general Parisian life (inevitable accordion at the end) and by composers...and organs...that had nothing to do with ND. Latry's musical contribution was a scale showing off his septieme mutation stop. Couldn't we have had a blast of his improvisatory genius in that great pile?
All in all, nice idea for a programme, but a cut-and-paste job was all we got.
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