If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
This is what I like so much about the BBC - it's thoughtful, balanced approach and judicious lack of hyperbole.
I've never liked these saturation projects. A Bach weekend is one thing. A Beethoven year is quite another. As CotW is partly biograpphical, it makes me wonder how detailed Donald is going to get given that 125 episodes [really?] have to be filled. (Wig disposal, bathroom visits, ear-trumpet de-waxing?)
As CotW is partly biograpphical, it makes me wonder how detailed Donald is going to get given that 125 episodes [really?] have to be filled. (Wig disposal, bathroom visits, ear-trumpet de-waxing?)
I've never liked these saturation projects. A Bach weekend is one thing. A Beethoven year is quite another. As CotW is partly biograpphical, it makes me wonder how detailed Donald is going to get given that 125 episodes [really?] have to be filled. (Wig disposal, bathroom visits, ear-trumpet de-waxing?)
Since the complete oeuvre might take only around 100 hours to broadcast. That would leave around 12 minutes per episode for talk.
....As CotW is partly biograpphical, it makes me wonder how detailed Donald is going to get given that 125 episodes [really?] have to be filled. (Wig disposal, bathroom visits, ear-trumpet de-waxing?)
It could be done in silence on television with all material presented in writing in small notebooks with close-up camera work
I've never liked these saturation projects. A Bach weekend is one thing. A Beethoven year is quite another....
I believe that the growth in demand for podcasts - hence the introduction of ZOUNDZ! - indicates both a demand for music and for musical information. COTW is an ideal educational medium. And everyone's heard of Beethoven!
Does that include the numerous Werke Ohne Opusnummer?
Yup - the Warner "Complete Beethoven" boxed set takes 80CDs, each around the 70 min duration mark.
I've said elsewhere that I think there is a huge difference between the "-athons" of the Wright era, in which everything a composer wrote was broadcast non-stop* back-to-back for a week or more, and this year-long celebration of hour-long programmes, broadcast every other week, and with other Music between each programme.
If it is done properly (big "if", I know) it seems to me to be an entirely appropriate way for R3 to celebrate the work of one of humanity's greatest thinkers.
* - (with pauses for introductory comments by the presenters, and trailers for the programmes you were already listening to)
[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
One pleasant discovery for me (found in a street market stall here in France) was a big box of the Scottish, Irish and Welsh folksongs recorded for the DG anniversary series some years ago with Malcolm Martineau as the pianist. Delightful.
One pleasant discovery for me (found in a street market stall here in France) was a big box of the Scottish, Irish and Welsh folksongs recorded for the DG anniversary series some years ago with Malcolm Martineau as the pianist. Delightful.
- one of the great discoveries for me in the Warner "Big Box". I couldn't cope with a whole CD in one sitting, but with the contents spread over three 25-minute hearings, they're glorious. I'd love to hear some of these included in recitals - the arrangements with Piano Trio would ideal for a Lunchtime Concert.
(The performances of the orchestral Contredanses in that box are less successful - but give an idea that there is much more to be enjoyed from these pieces. I'd love to hear the Freiburg Baroquers doing their stuff with these works!)
[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
Comment