In the Parry from WA it was quite an unusual choice to have the short "O my soul, awake!" section taken so fast
Choral music at QEII's funeral at The Abbey and the committal at St George's
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Originally posted by DracoM View PostStars for me in the Funeral were the coffin-bearers. Those STEPS.........wow!
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostI found myself holding my breath until the coffin was safely deposited each time they made transfers but yes those steps. As is often the way I thought how small the coffin looked but then the commentary mentioned that it was lead-lined, at which point I thought - good thing HM was small. Up and down steps with such weight(not just of responsibility) on your shoulders."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostI found myself holding my breath until the coffin was safely deposited each time they made transfers but yes those steps. As is often the way I thought how small the coffin looked but then the commentary mentioned that it was lead-lined, at which point I thought - good thing HM was small. Up and down steps with such weight(not just of responsibility) on your shoulders.
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Originally posted by Keraulophone View PostAs for the Bach Fantasia à 5 - a fittingly solemn choice, though I wasn’t sure about the notes inégales applied to the first pair of quavers in each repetition of that recurring phrase. Other organists apply this unevenness to all four quavers.
Originally posted by Keraulophone View PostThen there is the extra ornamentation thought to be provided by JSB for performance on the pedal harpsichord. Is this all or partly necessary for organ performance
Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostThe Fantasia did not find favour with the Twitterati with the playing compared to that of Les Dawson.Slightly unfair I thought.
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Originally posted by Keraulophone View PostI’d say very unfair. Some of those are proper Twits. I try to avoid their grinding axes.
Try explaining notes inégales to the Twitterati!
The organ music at the Queen's funeral service in Westminster Abbey was not to everyone's taste with some likening it to Les Dawson's off-key piano playing and others asking if it was out of tune.
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Originally posted by Vox Humana View PostTechnically they weren't notes inégales but short appogiaturas. There are a few performances on YouTube that interpret them that way and play the following quavers (more or less) equally. At the slow speed we heard from Westminster I'm afraid that it made the piece sound incoherent and unrhythmical. It took me a good half-page to work out what the organist was doing and the result left me cold - which is a shame. because I consider BVW 562 one of Bach's most intense and poweful organ works.
Is there any evidence to support the pedal harpsichord theory, or is it just some organist's incredulity at so many ornaments appearing in an organ piece?
No, I can’t find any evidence that the ornamentation was meant for pedal harpsichord; it’s probably a myth. It’s more likely that the ornamentation in Bach’s manuscript really was meant for organ.
It’s a piece that so many organ students beginning their discovery of JSB must have learnt early in their studies, many from that famous Novello Book 3 which has the ‘straight’ quavers. Having learnt it so early on, it’s one of the few pieces of Bach I can play from memory, which has proved useful on occasion. I first discovered the appogiaturas and other ornamentation in the Widor-Schweitzer edition, which was a handsome reprint by Schirmer of the old Bachgesellschaft edition, including amusing Cavaillé-Coll-influenced suggested registrations from C-M Widor alongside deeply felt notes on the music from Albert Schweitzer (which become even more deeply felt when discussing the chorale preludes).
The fugue à 5 is intriguing, whether or not it belongs with the Fantasia. An ex-chorister of Truro Cathedral, who went on to take the highest starred First in music in his year at Cambridge, returned to give an organ recital which included his own completion of the fugue. It was an extraordinary feat of ingenious composition but it went on a bit too long for most listeners. Now he’s more into jazz…
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Originally posted by Keraulophone View PostYou’re quite correct VH, the ‘little notes’ are appogiaturas, though the effect does sound French, especially at the very measured speed chosen by Peter Holder. The slow tempo must have been carefully chosen to match the progress of the nave procession, so it may not have been his choice. If you are the ‘Vox Humana’ contributor to the Mander message boards, I read with interest your contributions re BWV 562 (back in March 2008!) especially when quoting Peter Williams (‘the taste hints at le goût français’) whose books I’ve got somewhere but can’t locate right now.
Originally posted by Keraulophone View PostThe fugue à 5 is intriguing, whether or not it belongs with the Fantasia. An ex-chorister of Truro Cathedral, who went on to take the highest starred First in music in his year at Cambridge, returned to give an organ recital which included his own completion of the fugue. It was an extraordinary feat of ingenious composition but it went on a bit too long for most listeners. Now he’s more into jazz…
It would seem from these photographs that the manuscript consists of just two pages, with the fugue occupying the back of the second page. I had always assumed that Bach had just left the fugue incomplete, but now I'm thinking that maybe he did complete it and we have lost the remainder.
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