Originally posted by Bryn
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Webern
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Roslynmuse:
Have you considered contacting the RLPO direct?
Several years ago, I did so to be reminded of the name of the composer of a Requiem they performed in the late 1960s in Liverpool Anglican Cathedral, together with Job (we all jumped out of our skins when full organ came in in that!). I have since forgotten again whose Requiem it was (Andriessen?), but they were able to help.
Good luck.
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One of the great joys of this Sony set of Webern is the singing of Heather Harper. Precise but intensely musical.
She seemed to me to be the ubiquitous British soprano from the late fifties to the late seventies, but I'm ashamed to say I never paid much attention to her work. Perhaps most famously she stepped in to replace Vishnevskaya at short notice in the 1962 premiere of Britten's War Requiem when the Soviet authorities did not allow her to travel.
I'll see what else I have in my 'library'.
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Roehre
Originally posted by verismissimo View PostOne of the great joys of this Sony set of Webern is the singing of Heather Harper. Precise but intensely musical.
She seemed to me to be the ubiquitous British soprano from the late fifties to the late seventies, but I'm ashamed to say I never paid much attention to her work. Perhaps most famously she stepped in to replace Vishnevskaya at short notice in the 1962 premiere of Britten's War Requiem when the Soviet authorities did not allow her to travel.
I'll see what else I have in my 'library'.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by verismissimo View PostI really get that there’s no immediate relationship in Webern between the sung line and the instrumental accompaniment. But there also seems also to be no relationship in his songs between the music and the meaning of the words.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI don't know about that "also" - the vocal line relates to the instrumental parts in the same sort of way as the instrumental parts relate to one another. As for the relationship between music and text, your observation begs the question of what kind of relationship there "ought" to be. Surely it could be said that Webern's vocal parts actually reflect rather precisely the kinds of poetic texts he was setting, and that any more traditionally madrigalian "word-painting" would achieve little more thancreating a stylistic hiatus between voice and accompaniment...
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by verismissimo View PostI don't have this feeling with either Schoenberg or Berg. Just with Webern...
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Originally posted by antongould View PostMartin Handley sort of did the thing this morning started with Webern - Im Sommerwind - but told us not to worry ......I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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