A reminder that Bliss's Meditations on a Theme by John Blow, in the BBC Chorus and Orchestra recording under Andrew Davis, has its outing at 3.35pm today as part of the Afternoon Concert.
Bliss, Arthur (1891 - 1975)
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostA reminder that Bliss's Meditations on a Theme by John Blow, in the BBC Chorus and Orchestra recording under Andrew Davis, has its outing at 3.35pm today as part of the Afternoon Concert.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Didn't quite know where to put this, but it is about Bliss. I am currently reading Paul Spicer's new biography of the composer (for review purposes) and was intrigued to hear about the architectural wonders of the house Bliss had designed in Somerset (by Peter Harland) during the 1930s, and where he lived and worked for the remainder of his life.
Looking it up online (Grade II listed), I was amazed to find that this very week it has gone on the market, and there are lots of photos of it here, substantially unchanged from the composer's own time:
What a remarkable home it is.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostDidn't quite know where to put this, but it is about Bliss. I am currently reading Paul Spicer's new biography of the composer (for review purposes) and was intrigued to hear about the architectural wonders of the house Bliss had designed in Somerset (by Peter Harland) during the 1930s, and where he lived and worked for the remainder of his life.
Looking it up online (Grade II listed), I was amazed to find that this very week it has gone on the market, and there are lots of photos of it here, substantially unchanged from the composer's own time:
What a remarkable home it is.
Also, there should be a better Amazon listing at this stage, really. Odd. Hey ho, hope it is a good book, and gets the coverage that it deserves, whatever that is.
Oh yes, nice place Blissy had there. I’m about £2.5m shy of the asking price, I reckon !!
Thanks for flagging the book and the house up MJ. Very interesting.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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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostHmmm.straight to PB…..lucky to get a review at all IMO
At least I get my reviewing fee, and yes - though not without its quirks, it is a lively read, with much intelligent discussion of the music itself, which goes a long way with me at least.
Nice place indeed ... the architect also designed the Finzi farmhouse, which Paul Spicer tells us has been more mucked about since, making the Bliss house very special (and doubtless very expensive, as you suggest!)
(I've just spotted that I share my place of birth with Paul Spicer, and - this I already knew, of course - with John Ireland. So he's bound to get a good review from me!)
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostI don't even get the paperback: just a watermarked digital download. That's how it is, these days.
At least I get my reviewing fee, and yes - though not without its quirks, it is a lively read, with much intelligent discussion of the music itself, which goes a long way with me at least.
Nice place indeed ... the architect also designed the Finzi farmhouse, which Paul Spicer tells us has been more mucked about since, making the Bliss house very special (and doubtless very expensive, as you suggest!)
Like the cover of the book.
The house is yours for £3 m, which looks good compared to , say, some places in outer London !!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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One amusing passage from Paul Spicer's new book on Bliss, is this reprint of a letter (actually from his son in law) purporting to be from the BBC's accountancy department, when Bliss was Director of Music. Bliss replied in some detail: the gist was, that this sort of communication wasn't a very long way from some of the suggestions he did have to hear!
‘For considerable periods the four oboes had nothing to do. Their number should be reduced and the work spread more evenly over the whole of the concert, thus eliminating peaks of activity. All the twelve violins were playing identical notes. This seems unnecessary duplication… Much effort was absorbed in the playing of demisemiquavers. This seemed an unnecessary refinement. It is recommended that all notes should be rounded off to the nearest semiquaver. If this were done it would be possible to use trainees and lower-grade operators more extensively. No useful purpose is served by repeating on the horns a passage which has already been handled by the strings. It is estimated that if all redundant passages were eliminated, the whole concert time of two hours could be reduced to twenty minutes and there would have been no need for an interval.’
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I've seen that spoof letter attributed to other authors on other occasions. It seems to be one of those jokes that goes the rounds, like the one purporting to be Toscanini's comment on the difficulties of working with Pavarotti . Whoever inserted those names seems not to have checked his dates.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostI've seen that spoof letter attributed to other authors on other occasions. It seems to be one of those jokes that goes the rounds, like the one purporting to be Toscanini's comment on the difficulties of working with Pavarotti . Whoever inserted those names seems not to have checked his dates.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostYes, it's very readable, and very reliable of course on Howells' music. Small print runs, instant OOP, high prices.
His family all hailed from the Forest of Dean area for generations back, and the importance of this to Howells's makeup and personality cannot be underestimated.
Oh yes it can.
I hope the book on Bliss is better (but no-one seems to bother proofreading anything these days, so expectations are not high).
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostI hope the book on Bliss is better (but no-one seems to bother proofreading anything these days, so expectations are not high).
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I've found many errors in recent books, of a type which lead me to suspect that they're dictated into a computer which is supposed to recognise and type out the words, but which types something that 'sounds like' the word spoken . Thus one sees, for example, a well-known composer's name repeatedly misspelt in the same way.
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