Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur
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Bartok (1881 - 1945)
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My older brother was keen on Bartok, he even named our pet tortoise Bartok!
I took to Bartok immediately even though I was only about 9!!
Stones, Beatles, Beefheart, Velvet Underground, Henry Mancini and Bartok were popular in my household, along with all the other 60s stuff.
Later on, it was the Concerto For Orchestra, Music For Strings, Percussion And Celeste, and the string quartets that sealed it for me.
I also love The Miraculous Mandarin and the Four Orchestral Pieces, which could be viewed as the closest he got to a symphony.
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I seem to have carried Bartok's Concerto for Orchestra with me, somewhere in the back of my mind, through my life - probably because of my early passion for the LSO/Solti LP, one of the first borrowed from the local library, with that stunning abstract painting on the Decca sleeve (repro in the Legends reissue). I first played it at dusk, just home from School on a March evening, my sister's first baby crying distantly somewhere. Concerto for Orchestra is one of my inner icons.
I don't play it much now though.
I've been obsessed with the Piano Concertos for just as long, starting with the Fricsay/Anda LPs. They're still alive for me now, usually with Donohoe/Rattle on the EMI CD (brilliant red cover with swirling keyboard), or the wondrous Bavouzet/Noseda in 24/96 on Chandos (surrealistic swan/shadow on deep green background, like moss on a black river - Tuonela - Bartok does tend to inspire great cover art!).
Soft spots for Wooden Prince, and the Divertimento for Strings (but think I've worn that out through overplay)... Quartets currently off the playlist after obsessive replay of Takacs and Vegh, back to them in my 70s perhaps...Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 21-01-15, 04:41.
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Fired up by a recording of the Miraculous Mandarin Suite, I seized a rare opportunity to see the ballet. It was outstandingly well done at Covent Garden in the 1960s by the Royal Danish Ballet, choreographed and danced by Flemming Flindt. An extraordinary story and hardly to the taste of most balletomanes (I am not one). I hardly think that any company would touch it nowadays.
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For me too, after the Music for SPC, it was the SQs (Fine Arts Saga recordings, now bought on CD) and the gatefold Anda piano concertos/rhapsody.
I have a soft spot for the viola concerto, and like the Naxos CD with the two versions (Serly 1949 and Peter Bartok/Paul Neubauer, 1995) on.
Does anyone remember a staging in London in the late 1980s of all three stage works (Wooden Prince, Bluebeard, and Mandarin)? A foreign company I think. Can't remember where, but I DO remember being impressed!
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostI LOVE the Concerto for Orchestra, Ferney. How can you possibly not like it?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostApart from the CfO my favourite Bartok has to be The Miraculous Mandarin and then Duke Bluebeard's Castle. I find Bluebeard a deeply unsettling, even frightening piece to listen to but what a great work it is.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostJust one of those things, Pet. I have tried - Kubelik, Solti (both of 'em), Karajan, Reiner, Fricsay. It's not that I dislike the work, but it just doesn't get my pulse racing as does the prospect of hearing the 4tets, or the solo Violin Sonata, or the Mandarin or Bluebeard, or the (solo) Concertos, or MfS,P & C, or the piano Music.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostFor me too, after the Music for SPC, it was the SQs (Fine Arts Saga recordings, now bought on CD) and the gatefold Anda piano concertos/rhapsody.
I have a soft spot for the viola concerto, and like the Naxos CD with the two versions (Serly 1949 and Peter Bartok/Paul Neubauer, 1995) on.
Does anyone remember a staging in London in the late 1980s of all three stage works (Wooden Prince, Bluebeard, and Mandarin)? A foreign company I think. Can't remember where, but I DO remember being impressed!
After quite a few years I'm still obsessed with Bluebeard's Castle and look forward to seeing another concert performance in March. It's surely the most perfect one act opera.
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Originally posted by Ferretfancy View PostIt was at the Coliseum, I think with members of the Royal Danish Ballet. An extraordinary evening encompassing all three stage works, it was the only time I've seen the Wooden Prince, having listened repeatedly to the Dorati recording with the LSO.
After quite a few years I'm still obsessed with Bluebeard's Castle and look forward to seeing another concert performance in March. It's surely the most perfect one act opera.
Note that Bluebeard is part of a double bill Live from the Met on 14 February (some Valentine), possibly at a cinema near you.
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Originally posted by visualnickmos View PostTry Rafael Fruhbeck de Burgos - he might put a smile on your face!
or even Bernstein..... where next?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostGood idea - I didn't know he'd recorded it, and I usually greatly admire his work.
Done him.
Done Bernstein - there must one recording out there somewhere that will convert you! If this quest for the elusive CfO is ultimately successful, I wouldn't mind betting that it's a relatively unlikely combo, that finally 'hooks' you..... sometimes that's the way; keep us posted!
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Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View PostSeriously, I leave it to the Grand Panjandrums (Panjandra?) of the Bored to decide whether two threads with the same name will cause any problems. If not, I hereby grant you a licence to use my Intellectual Property...
...licence fees to be settled via PM, and solicitors if necessary
Has whatever the issue was been resolved?
I've steered a bit clear of this thread... as the Bartok Question is a tricky one. I fear I shall be in a minority of one (with ferney coming to visit occasionally )
I've been listening to 'classical' music for knocking on 35 years now. Early on, the orchestral works really got to me - Ozawa conducting Mandarin and MSPC was one of my favourite cassettes at University. But I find that they and most other pieces have had a relatively short 'shelf life' in my brain. I find I know how they 'go' and no matter how good the performance, they sadly leave me cold now.
I find generally that music whose main attributes are (to my ears anyway) colouristic, rhythmic, 'pictorial', mood painting... that's the music that I tire of over time. Or maybe I just don't 'get' it - perhaps others find lots of emotional or psychological content in the Concerto for Orchestra. I don't. I'd say the same, though, of even 'Rite of Spring' and a lot of Stravinsky - it doesn't repel me, but no longer (and I feel pathetic saying this about 'Rite of Spring') interests me very much, certainly in recorded or broadcast form. I'd be interested to hear those sorts of pieces in live concerts, for the sonic excitement of a great orchestra at full chat - although other pieces would be more likely to get my wallet and me out and into the hall.
I've never 'got' the string quartets either, despite heartfelt attempts by musical friends. And all those Folk Song suites and arrangements are I'm afraid - one reason I steer clear of the 'playlist' programmes in the morning, as they seem to be perennial favourites, understandably as they are compact and ear-catching... another reason I think I'm not the natural audience for those programmes any more.
As often with me, the closest to my affections are the piano concertos. No 3 with Sir András at the Proms the other year was electrifying."...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 aeolium View Postfor me Bluebeard is the greatest of all Bartok's works. Not only is the music so powerful and disturbing, the whole opera is rich as a psychological and philosophical work, an astonishingly prophetic creation from before the European catastrophe of the First World War.
So here goes. I think Pierre Boulez, the Hagen Quartet and Zoltán Kocsis will be my guides.
A few more words about Bluebeard. To my mind none of it is "happening", and the fairytale serves as an "archetypal" structure through which a confrontation between an individual and the seemingly autonomous contents of his (and it could just as well have been her) subconscious is enacted and eventually left (once more) unresolved. I guess a similar thing might be said about Bartók's other stage works, but that will require some further thought and listening.Last edited by Richard Barrett; 23-09-18, 07:15.
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