Originally posted by verismissimo
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Sir Thomas Beecham and Sir Malcolm Sargent birthdays today
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Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View Post... While still at school I got badly hit by The Walk to the Paradise Garden...
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Originally posted by salymap View PostHelp please. Which Delius work has parts for male and female solo voice and contains the line 'Once I walked through a populous city' ? Was that'Paris' ?
I remember hearing that years ago and was really bowled over by the beauty of it.
Paris is an orchestral tone poem, of course.
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amateur51
Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View PostI think I know what you mean, salymap. While still at school I got badly hit by The Walk to the Paradise Garden on a 10" disc (Collins??) in the school music room. But still rather waiting for the rest of Delius to do the same. Some works nearly do it (Brigg Fair, Appalachia, Sea Drift - nearly, but they don't quite stick), yet even WttPG has faded for me, which hasn't happened for most of the music that hit me in my teens. A very slippery fish somehow, our Frederick!
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Originally posted by Sir Velo View PostIt's a Whitman text used by Delius in Idyll (though it's actually "Once I pass'd through...etc"). There's a fine recording made by Fenby as part of the Delius Collection with Thomas Allen and Felicity Lott in the solo roles.
Paris is an orchestral tone poem, of course.
Thanks a lot Sir Velo. I'm not buying any more CDs, [age, space, so many I have but not played] but must make a noteof it.
I usually remember a lot about music I've heard but, as I said earlier, Delius is a difficult one for me.
My old senior colleague, Ernest Chapman, actually met Delius and took Felix Aprahamian,another critic to meet Delius in France. All on Google. He would be ashamed of me.
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This is steadily getting further away from the opening post, but I distinctly remember on a very foggy evening in the late 1970s in Muswell Hill, being scared witless by the sudden apparition in my way of a Martian. It was FA, wearing that distinctive long cloak, trying out the latest fad in large headphone radios, complete with antennae.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View PostThis is steadily getting further away from the opening post, but I distinctly remember on a very foggy evening in the late 1970s in Muswell Hill, being scared witless by the sudden apparition in my way of a Martian. It was FA, wearing that distinctive long cloak, trying out the latest fad in large headphone radios, complete with antennae.
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Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View PostThis is steadily getting further away from the opening post, but I distinctly remember on a very foggy evening in the late 1970s in Muswell Hill, being scared witless by the sudden apparition in my way of a Martian. It was FA, wearing that distinctive long cloak, trying out the latest fad in large headphone radios, complete with antennae.
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Originally posted by Gordon View PostCome to think of it Beecham didn't do much Beethoven either.
This image always cracks me up, and I have to exercise especial care not to think of it when at a concert for fear of the consequences.
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More than two weeks since the start of this thread and have just got round to playing, yet again, a highly infectious recording by TB of Handel's, arr. Beecham,( EMI Studio, DRM,) "Love in Bath". 22 scintillating and evocative tracks played by the RPO. The disc is completed by "The Gods Go A'Begging" and 'Amaryllis Suite (excerpts). Worth seeking - CDM 7 63374 2.
The pleasure compounded by reading Beecham Stories, (Futura 1978, p.b.), compiled by Harold Atkins and Archie Newman, Foreword by Yehudi Menuhin.
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