Originally posted by Simon
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Sumptuous in G from Hereford
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heliocentric
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI love Elgar's Music.
Towards the end of his life, at around the time he recorded Nielsen and Saint-Saens for the first time, Karajan ordered scores of Elgar's orchestral Music so that he could study them. He sent all of them back, except the Second Symphony, which he kept in his "reserve" desk. He died before he got round to either performing or ultimately rejecting it.
But Op XXXIX's comments don't "sound" like Karajan, who was never as "sharp" as this - even when commenting on HIPP enthusiasts! Where is the quotation taken from?
(And Helio is right: Karajan recorded Holst (twice), RVW and Britten, and performed Walton and Tippett in concert - to neither composer's satisfaction!)
As for the 'second-rate Brahms', that was in a review of a Karajan recording of the 'The Planets' (did he not record it three times?) by Michael Kennedy. It has been a while since I saw the review, but Kennedy was rather mystified by Karajan's statement, as he couldn't hear a note of Brahms in Elgar, but plenty of Brahms in the Holst.
(Don't know that I agree with Kennedy, but if I do hear the occasional Brahmsian references in Elgar, it's never bothered me.)
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Thanks, Op. I'm only aware of two Karajan recordings of The Planets - the 1960s DECCA with the VPO and the 1980s DG with the Berliners. Not sure which works by Brahms that Kennedy (a fine commentator on Music) can hear "plenty" of in the Holst (the Academic Festival Ovt in Jupiter at a push)?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostWhilst I take you point insofar as it goes, I did not write of short-sightness per se and tout court but "ongoing" shortsightedness, by which I mean the short-sightedness that has continued to ensure that this shortcoming has never been addressed in any subsequent refurbishment of the instrument; substantial works have been undertaken at various times on all three (Hereford, Redcliffe and Westminster), yet no one has thought to extend the console and ranks.
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Originally posted by Wolsey View PostProbably because of the cost and the extensive work involved: new console to accommodate new manuals and pedal board, new soundboards and action, new pipework to match the existing material. This is an alteration of questionable musical worth to an historic organ.
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Originally posted by ahinton View Post..... but what's so "historical" about the Hereford organ that it should not be tampered ("tinkered", Sir Edward?!) with in the way that I mentioned?
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What I hear behind Elgar's choral music (this thread is getting a little like I'm Sorry I haven't a Clue's Tag Wrestling) is Bruckner. I recently sang Bruckner's Mass in F minor for the first time and realised the affinity between the two (there's even a yearning phrase with prominent leading-note in the Bruckner Agnus which I'm convinced Elgar lifted for his setting of the Benedictus).
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Originally posted by mopsus View PostWhat I hear behind Elgar's choral music (this thread is getting a little like I'm Sorry I haven't a Clue's Tag Wrestling) is Bruckner. I recently sang Bruckner's Mass in F minor for the first time and realised the affinity between the two (there's even a yearning phrase with prominent leading-note in the Bruckner Agnus which I'm convinced Elgar lifted for his setting of the Benedictus).
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Originally posted by Wolsey View PostI suggest you ask the Heritage Lottery Fund who supported the 2004 refurbishment. I stand to be corrected, but from what I know of their strict conditions, they would not have financed the work eight years ago if the organ had been "tampered with" in the way you suggest.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostI would not in any case regard such extensions as "tampering" in any pejorative sense but as improvements to the instrument's specification that would enable certain repertoire to be played on it without compromise as it can be on instruments such as the two I mentioned.
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Simon
For what it's worth, I like the sound of the Hereford organ so much that I don't care about any inadequacies that it may have. I haven't played it myself, but everything I've ever heard played on it has sounded wonderful and IMO it's one of the best in the country.
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Originally posted by Simon View PostFor what it's worth, I like the sound of the Hereford organ so much that I don't care about any inadequacies that it may have. I haven't played it myself, but everything I've ever heard played on it has sounded wonderful and IMO it's one of the best in the country.Last edited by ahinton; 22-09-12, 18:43.
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I see that the Hereford organ, or at least a digital sampling thereof, is to feature on a forthcoming recording by the King's Consort of ceremonial music by Stanford and others.
The King's Consort is one of the world's leading period instrument orchestras and choirs. Founded in 1980, TKC’s many CD recordings have won numerous prestigious international awards and sold more than 1,500,000 copies. TKC has toured to almost every European country, as well as in Japan, Hong Kong, the Far East and North and South America.My boxes are positively disintegrating under the sheer weight of ticks. Ed Reardon
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....just to stick in my two penn'orth about the Hereford organ, I played it TWO rebuilds ago (pre-Massey days) when it was very 'Willis', especially the wonderful old Willis console. I spent the inside of a week accompanying a visiting choir and for that purpose it was unbeatable given the sort of repertoire done in those days; a huge palette of sloppy Romantic sounds was available with a swell-box that could fade away to the almost inaudible. I seem to remember it had some weird couplers such as 'great to choir sub-octave' or some such thing! I'd better stop [no pun intended] 'cos I feel an anorak coming on.
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