Originally posted by Richard Barrett
View Post
Tippett, Michael Kemp (1905 - 98)
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostHas anyone got any views on the Brabbins Tippett symphonies? Has he done more than 1 & 2?
[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
Comment
-
-
Many thanks ferney.
Plenty of time left, over three weeks on all of them. I shall organise some dedicated listening.
I'm downloading the Hickox as I type because my copy of #4 slips in the first movement and I have #3 somewhere I know not (hasn't been seen for years as my go-to is Davis/Solti on Decca).
# '0' is a new one on me!
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Beef Oven! View Post# '0' is a new one on me![FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostHas anyone got any views on the Brabbins Tippett symphonies? Has he done more than 1 & 2?
In the first movement of No.2 Brabbins goes for weight and truculence rather than out-and-out energy; but this is marvellously contrasted with delicately drawn coloristic and contrapuntal subtlety (strings especially touching). I felt I was hearing things I’d not heard in this piece before, or not as clearly, or as enjoyably.
In any case, what would be the point of repeating the interpretative shaping and shadings of his predecessors?
The more the movement progresses the more you are irresistibly pulled into the momentum, the schwung, a moderato rather than Vigoroso, which yet comes to seem just right - tempo giusto in the here and now of this recording. So infectious - I found it impossible to keep still!
In No.1, Brabbins has a more immediate, closer-set sound than Davis or Hickox; it lacks some spaciousness and sweetness and feels a little shut-in a higher levels, but the upside is a very appealing warmth and colour, engaging you quickly with the individual players and sections. I also find his phrasing shapelier and more persuasive, the emotional ebb and flow caught more vividly.
***
But I found the differences largely held true throughout - the Davis seems to have the greater cogency, attack and rhythmic energy at first (and very persuasively - it is the LSO after all..), but once you've listened closely to Brabbins you feel that those pioneering discs miss some colour, detail and expressive subtlety. I found too, that the more I heard of Hickox, the better they always sounded, for similar reasons. Wonderful Chandos sound too.
***
Among the somewhat overlooked, what about Byzantium? I recall recording this from a Proms relay (IIRC the first UK performance) and being utterly stunned by its uncompromising brilliance; the orchestral setting seems to reflect the brazen, clangorous imagery, the extremes of human/mechanical/immortal, of Yeats' great poem itself.
The vocal line is extraordinary - such obsessive, intense melismatics!
Sadly, there's just the one recording..(Robinson/CSO/Solti). but it still sounded wonderful just now....classic late Tippett, something of the grand summation about it.
According to Schott, it's only had 5 performances since the 1991 Chicago premiere, and just a single one this century, in 2004....maybe Barbara Hannigan would be brave enough to tackle that vocal line ...if she knows it exists.
...if you seek it out, make sure you have the text at hand...Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 13-11-18, 03:45.
Comment
-
-
Just heard Brabbins doing No.3 on iPlayer. On the whole the first movement lacks Colin Davis's cogent rhythmic propulsion in the first movement, and throughout some of the solo commentaries (violin/viola, harp, cello, tubular bells) get somewhat lost in the distance when there's other stuff going on. Perhaps the 1973 Philips recording spoiled us with all that close-miking, not so in evidence here? Also soparano Rachel Nicholls, IMHO, doesn't ascend to the heights of Heather Harper in this work, but I much prefer her to Faye Robinson on the Hickox.
This Brabbins performance is not the live concert I thought but, it seems from the commentary, the recording made for the Hyperion release next year.
Looking forward to hearing No.4 next.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostThere is something to be said for Davis' approach
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostI compared the three recordings earlier this year, but I only seem to have saved this stub...
In the first movement of No.2 Brabbins goes for weight and truculence rather than out-and-out energy; but this is marvellously contrasted with delicately drawn coloristic and contrapuntal subtlety (strings especially touching). I felt I was hearing things I’d not heard in this piece before, or not as clearly, or as enjoyably.
In any case, what would be the point of repeating the interpretative shaping and shadings of his predecessors?
The more the movement progresses the more you are irresistibly pulled into the momentum, the schwung, a moderato rather than Vigoroso, which yet comes to seem just right - tempo giusto in the here and now of this recording. So infectious - I found it impossible to keep still!
In No.1, Brabbins has a more immediate, closer-set sound than Davis or Hickox; it lacks some spaciousness and sweetness and feels a little shut-in a higher levels, but the upside is a very appealing warmth and colour, engaging you quickly with the individual players and sections. I also find his phrasing shapelier and more persuasive, the emotional ebb and flow caught more vividly.
***
But I found the differences largely held true throughout - the Davis seems to have the greater cogency, attack and rhythmic energy at first (and very persuasively - it is the LSO after all..), but once you've listened closely to Brabbins you feel that those pioneering discs miss some colour, detail and expressive subtlety. I found too, that the more I heard of Hickox, the better they always sounded, for similar reasons. Wonderful Chandos sound too.
***
Among the somewhat overlooked, what about Byzantium? I recall recording this from a Proms relay (IIRC the first UK performance) and being utterly stunned by its uncompromising brilliance; the orchestral setting seems to reflect the brazen, clangorous imagery, the extremes of human/mechanical/immortal, of Yeats' great poem itself.
The vocal line is extraordinary - such obsessive, intense melismatics!
Sadly, there's just the one recording..(Robinson/CSO/Solti). but it still sounded wonderful just now....classic late Tippett, something of the grand summation about it.
According to Schott, it's only had 5 performances since the 1991 Chicago premiere, and just a single one this century, in 2004....maybe Barbara Hannigan would be brave enough to tackle that vocal line ...if she knows it exists.
...if you seek it out, make sure you have the text at hand...
I am having the same experience regarding Hickox. I only got the downloads of symphs 1-4 last night, but I've played each of them 3/4 times through and the gulf between them and the Colin Davis performances just gets wider. I guess for the reasons Richard has already given upthread.
Byzantium? I love it. I first heard it from that Proms relay you mentioned (early 1990s?) and acquired the Faye Robinson/Solti Chicago SO as soon as I could. It's a favourite of mine. I'm very happy with Faye's singing, so beautiful and soulful, but I agree that Barbara Hannigan would be interesting.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post... although not if you really want to hear everything that Tippett wrote in his scores.
In the light of Boilk's comments on the recording by Brabbins of no.3, it seems the field is still open.
I agree that Heather Harper is a more powerful soloist than Faye Robinson.
It's a very difficult part for a singer to get her head (and voice) around though. I don't think either Harper or Robinson really took its blues-derived inflections as far as they could be taken - I think it would be a beautiful idea to give the solo to a singer more specialised in jazz, with a microphone if necessary.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostByzantium? I love it. I first heard it from that Proms relay you mentioned (early 1990s?) and acquired the Faye Robinson/Solti Chicago SO as soon as I could. It's a favourite of mine. I'm very happy with Faye's singing, so beautiful and soulful, but I agree that Barbara Hannigan would be interesting.
(I found this link by Googling, so assume that it is OK to cite here without any copyright issues!)
PS: I do find the American style of referring to people (Miss Robinson, Miss Norman, Mr Tippett, Mr Solti) very quaint.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post... although not if you really want to hear everything that Tippett wrote in his scores. In the light of Boilk's comments on the recording by Brabbins of no.3, it seems the field is still open. I agree that Heather Harper is a more powerful soloist than Faye Robinson. It's a very difficult part for a singer to get her head (and voice) around though. I don't think either Harper or Robinson really took its blues-derived inflections as far as they could be taken - I think it would be a beautiful idea to give the solo to a singer more specialised in jazz, with a microphone if necessary.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Pulcinella View Post
PS: I do find the American style of referring to people (Miss Robinson, Miss Norman, Mr Tippett, Mr Solti) very quaint.
Comment
-
-
Finally got round (via a charity shop bargain) to Symphony 3, first time for many years. Still can't get on with the Scena at the end at all, but what struck me and amazed me was the fact that so much of the brass writing in the 1st movement is reproduced, sometimes slightly adapted, in the 4th Symphony! (And not only the brass, there were hints of the rising string passage that, by the time of the 4th, Tippett was signalling as inspired by a Gibbons Fantasia). For me, the material is much more successful in the later work.
The first song, with the 'horn', I still find marvellous, but I'm not able to relate it to what has gone before.
Comment
-
-
Listening at last to Brabbins' recording of no.3 which I downloaded this morning (without any help from the "Hyperion Download Manager" software, which needs a bit of a rethink IMO). It's very refreshing to hear the orchestra in a more realistic balance and with a deeper perspective than in the older recordings (so that for example the third movement doesn't turn into a piano concerto), though it would have been nice if the engineers had applied the same principle to the voice, which is much too upfront - and much too vibrato-laden and expressively unsubtle. Notwithstanding all that, I think it will be my recording of choice from now on, until something better comes along, which it may not do in my lifetime I suppose. I'm not as concerned as Boilk is by the slower tempi in comparison with Davis - it does mean that everything is a lot more rhythmically secure. I don't think it would be impossible to achieve razor-sharp precision at faster tempi, but that would require more rehearsal and more recording takes than were available no doubt!
Originally posted by silvestrione View PostThe first song, with the 'horn', I still find marvellous, but I'm not able to relate it to what has gone before.
Comment
-
Comment