Originally posted by smittims
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Elgar 29 Jul - 2 Aug
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Thanks to S-A for his thoughtful, knowledgeable extended posts. Helpful for me as recently I have made a bit more headway than before with AS and Berg (have always liked Webern).
Not sure I've ever listened to Elgar's Violin Sonata. Must try it.
I'm another admirer (well, I love!) Rubbra Sym 5, 6 and 7.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostFor me the classic version of the Elgar sonata is Sammons/Murdoch on Naxos or Dutton, but Sammons' pupil Hugh Bean made a fine stereo version for EMI with David Parkhouse.
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This is one of the faults of this programme for me. That sonata does need hearing entire to make its effect, not least because there are thematic links from one movement to another.
I think COTW needs replacing with a similar strand which allows only complete works. This of course would explode the one -hour fixed format, as (for instance) a programme in a series on Wagner would need longer episodes that a Webern series. I'd like to see more emphasis (in the spoken bits) on the music than on. for example, how many children the composer's wife was having, etc.
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Originally posted by smittims View Post
I think COTW needs replacing with a similar strand which allows only complete works. This of course would explode the one -hour fixed format, as (for instance) a programme in a series on Wagner would need longer episodes that a Webern series. I'd like to see more emphasis (in the spoken bits) on the music than on. for example, how many children the composer's wife was having, etc.
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Looking through a list of Elgar's living addresses, I discovered his first London address to have been here in Crystal Palace in 1889, when they had married. I could find no physical trace of The Oaks, on Fountain Drive. Then yesterday it occurred to me that it might be on one of my old maps, and there it was, actually marked on the 1871 OS Kent Sheet 7.10 centreing on the Palace, where Elgar had some gigs I believe - his main reason for their moving this way. The exact location of the house - sandwiched in the tight angle where Fountain Drive forks away south from College Road, so it must have been small - now has two houses from the 1950s on it. I slightly know the man living there - my upstairs neighbour does his accounts. It is a mere two minutes' stroll from where I live!Last edited by Serial_Apologist; 15-01-24, 23:25.
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Originally posted by Sir Velo View Post
There has to be a balance between the biographical and the musicological but I would say that the programme has erred recently far too much in the direction of the former."...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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Originally posted by smittims View PostHe also referred to Dora Penney as Dora Powell, which she wasn't at the time Elgar knew her in Malvern. I hear lots of little slips like these, which is one reason I've stopped listening.
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Originally posted by Nick Armstrong View Post
Just catching up with the “Self-Made Man” episode, and had to relisten to one thing to make sure I hadn’t mis-heard… but no, a rare lapse: DM referred to Elgar’s disappointment at not being in the Coronation Honours List in June 1902 for the “new king, George V”……
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Originally posted by Sir Velo View Post
That is a bad error and suggestive that the interns have been let loose again without appropriate supervision or review of their "output". However, DM and/or the producer should have sufficient general knowledge to be able to rectify on the fly.
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