Originally posted by Richard Barrett
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Tippett, Michael Kemp (1905 - 98)
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostYes I will.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostHave you managed to listen to that Barstow/BBCSO/Leppard recording yet? I managed to get a reasonably priced copy which seems to play o.k. but from which the second movement of the Symphony fails to rip without serious glitches from around 12 minutes in, right through to the end. I have tried with both EAC and Sound Forge Pro 12, and get the same problems with each. I guess the error correction in my player must be working full out. It's perhaps ironic that a far-right Tory such a Leppard should make such a good fist of conducting Tippett's work.
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Now playing: The Rose Lake. I've listened to it a few times but I'm not sure I've really got it yet. Previously: Byzantium, which I found very beautiful. I don't know the poem really though, must take a closer look at that. BTW I was very taken with The Ice Break which I don't think I'd heard before. The libretto raised a few smiles but hey, I thought, as a Stockhausen aficionado I can handle it.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostHave you managed to listen to that Barstow/BBCSO/Leppard recording yet? I managed to get a reasonably priced copy which seems to play o.k. but from which the second movement of the Symphony fails to rip without serious glitches from around 12 minutes in, right through to the end. I have tried with both EAC and Sound Forge Pro 12, and get the same problems with each. I guess the error correction in my player must be working full out. It's perhaps ironic that a far-right Tory such a Leppard should make such a good fist of conducting Tippett's work.
I still haven't found the time to listen to the Brabbins and try to follow the score (and I won't tomorrow either: volunteer work, optician, choir!).
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostDoes that imply that you think it's a good performance then, Bryn?
I still haven't found the time to listen to the Brabbins and try to follow the score (and I won't tomorrow either: volunteer work, optician, choir!).
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostNow playing: The Rose Lake. I've listened to it a few times but I'm not sure I've really got it yet. Previously: Byzantium, which I found very beautiful. I don't know the poem really though, must take a closer look at that. BTW I was very taken with The Ice Break which I don't think I'd heard before. The libretto raised a few smiles but hey, I thought, as a Stockhausen aficionado I can handle it.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostBTW I was very taken with The Ice Break which I don't think I'd heard before. The libretto raised a few smiles but hey, I thought, as a Stockhausen aficionado I can handle it.
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Today's listening so far: The Rose Lake again. Gradually getting more fascinated than puzzled by the way that (unlike his other large scale works) it's difficult to find much in the way of connecting threads between its diverse episodes. Of course, in other music this isn't a problem but experience with Tippett's symphonies led me to expect a particular kind of continuity that isn't really there, being replaced by a kind of drifting between more or less sharply defined sound-images. Today I shall be listening to at least one of the string quartets, another area of MT's work I don't really know.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostToday's listening so far: The Rose Lake again. Gradually getting more fascinated than puzzled by the way that (unlike his other large scale works) it's difficult to find much in the way of connecting threads between its diverse episodes. Of course, in other music this isn't a problem but experience with Tippett's symphonies led me to expect a particular kind of continuity that isn't really there, being replaced by a kind of drifting between more or less sharply defined sound-images. Today I shall be listening to at least one of the string quartets, another area of MT's work I don't really know.
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