Originally posted by Mary Chambers
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20thC composers in their own words: new series on BBC4 TV
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Mary Chambers View PostI don't think I'd seen Strauss before, and I'd vaguely expected him to look more interesting, somehow. Copland came across well.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostDespite all our sniffiness (including mine) about the lowbrow presentation and info, maybe we should bear in mind that BBC4 probably had a general audience in mind.
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VodkaDilc
I thought the programme began well, with good footage of Stravinsky, Schoenberg, Strauss, Copland and Walton, but it began to suffer from "we've got some film of x, so let's work it in somehow". I know Lutyens has her fans, but alongside these giants! It looks as if the same might happen next week - Bernstein recording with Carreras again!
And another short clip at the beginning stood out to me for personal reasons. Time and time again over the years we see the clip from the Boulez Roundhouse Prom in about 1971 which included a BBCSO percussionist dropping a tray of crockery in Ligeti's Nouvelles Aventures. I took part in that Prom, so I notice. Here it comes again!
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Originally posted by Mary Chambers View PostWell, if you think so....! I was interested to see her. She's always been just a name to me.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View Post. Wonder what they'll do with Britten next week? No doubt he'll be strolling along Aldeburgh beach with his walking stick, his cardigan and his dog.
The programme is really too simplified and shallow to be much use to those of us who know a bit already. Some of the footage is worth seeing, though I think it gives a distorted, glib view of the composers. What else can be done in the few minutes they each get?
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostLutyens TOWERS over Copland and Walton, and stands a good few feet higher than Strauss, for that matter!
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The programme is really too simplified and shallow to be much use to those of us who know a bit already. Some of the footage is worth seeing, though I think it gives a distorted, glib view of the composers. What else can be done in the few minutes they each get?
I wish they had shown a clip of Walton which I remember seeing once. Lounging on his patio in Ischia, he was asked by a very 1960s Arts interviewer, "Now tell me, Sir William, can you explain the musical rationale behind the more concise nature of your most recent works?"
"Less trouble" growled WW.
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