Bostridge on Britten (repeat)

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • amateur51
    • Nov 2024

    Bostridge on Britten (repeat)

    At 12.15 on Saturday 29 June, a repeat of a programme first broadcast in January 2013 ...

    Ian Bostridge is famous for singing the music of Benjamin Britten. In the composer's centenary year, the singer reflects on the greatness of Britten's vocal music, so much of which was written for the tenor voice.

    Ian Bostridge brings his singer's experience and deep intelligence to bear on a composer whose work has formed a central part of his repertoire throughout his singing career. He pays tribute to Peter Pears, whose lifelong interpretation of Britten's music he greatly admires. He reflects on why Britten has never been fully absorbed into the mainstream of classical music and considers whether it has something to do with Britten's preoccupation with troubled, alienated characters and situations - exemplified in operas such as Peter Grimes and Turn of the Screw.

    The subjects of Britten's interest - the ostracized Peter Grimes or the tortured Captain Vere in Billy Budd - are powerfully characterized by the tenor voice. Between the countertenor and baritone, the tenor voice has the capacity to express the nuances of Britten's musical language.

    In this programme - full of wonderful music from the song cycles, the operas and the choral works - Ian Bostridge contemplates the strangeness of Britten's genius

  • Mary Chambers
    Full Member
    • Nov 2010
    • 1963

    #2
    And he is talking wonderful sense. It is such a relief to hear someone who really understands what he's talking about.

    Graham Johnson is also well worth hearing.

    (I suppose I mean I agree with everything they say.)

    Comment

    • amateur51

      #3
      Originally posted by Mary Chambers View Post
      And he is talking wonderful sense. It is such a relief to hear someone who really understands what he's talking about.

      Graham Johnson is also well worth hearing.
      Agreed Mary - GJ is wonderfully certain in his opinions and I love it.

      Comment

      • LeMartinPecheur
        Full Member
        • Apr 2007
        • 4717

        #4
        Mary: what did you think of the suggestion that most productions of Peter Grimes these days treat it as a 'big opera' needing a heroic tenor to fill big opera houses, and this is not what BB wanted, and indeed a likely reason why he cut up so rough about Jon Vickers' Grimes?
        I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!

        Comment

        • Mary Chambers
          Full Member
          • Nov 2010
          • 1963

          #5
          Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View Post
          Mary: what did you think of the suggestion that most productions of Peter Grimes these days treat it as a 'big opera' needing a heroic tenor to fill big opera houses, and this is not what BB wanted, and indeed a likely reason why he cut up so rough about Jon Vickers' Grimes?
          I feel it was the exact truth! Grimes is a wonderful opera however it's done, but it's rarely done now as Britten wanted it - at least the part of Grimes himself isn't.

          I actually found this programme almost creepy, because Bostridge seemed to be thinking my thoughts, especially about Pears. Nachtviolen is definitely one of the pieces I would choose to attempt to convey his art, and was long before the first broadcast of Bostridge's talk. It's a relief to me that someone so eminent can hear in Pears exactly what I hear - there are so many people now who seem to dislike his singing.

          Comment

          • Eine Alpensinfonie
            Host
            • Nov 2010
            • 20570

            #6
            Talking of Pears singling Britten, I'm still kicking myself for wiping the tape I had of the original broadcast of Paul Bunyan, which had Pears in the cast, after Britten had revised the work at the end of his life. If anyone has not been as foolish as I, I would be grateful for a copy of the broadcast.

            Comment

            Working...
            X