Originally posted by Simon
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'Difficult' choral music, opinions on
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paul duggan2
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Simon
Because I don't want my real name on an internet forum, that's all. I'd trust most people on here in general, but I don't expect my boss would be too happy about my views being plastered for all to see.
As far as I can tell - and I contribute to varying degrees to three forums, two public and one professional - most posters prefer to use screen-names.
Plus, I sometimes refer to my old school and the positions of some I met there; whilst I don't disparage them, I don't feel that they should be identifiable by all and sundry.
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Originally posted by Simon View PostDepends what you mean by significance. Fame is no guarantee of either ability or insight. One doesn't need to know precisely who someone is to value their accumulated experience and wisdom.
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Originally posted by Gabriel Jackson View PostIndeed, fame is not a guarantee of either ability or insight. But if you don't know who someone is, how can you assess their accumulated experience? Saying "I have been singing in choirs for 50 years" with no further explanation of which choirs, singing what, under whose direction etc. and expecting that statement, in itself, to confer some weight of expertise, is absurd.
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Originally posted by DracoM View PostWell, I hope that astonishingly brave treble gets a medal for that murderous series of solos in the Nunc. WHY would you want to go out of your way to make it near impossible to pitch from almost nothing with almost nothing going on round you to help? And LIVE?? Talk about nerve-wracking.
In terms of finding notes from almost nothing, the Nunc Dimittis actually begins with a D/E/F held cluster from the organ, clearly establishing a D minor tonality; this is followed by the ATB soloists holding a D/E/C# chord (again, clearly in D minor) before the treble soloist enters on the subdominant of D minor - G. Whilst that solo is tricky, and very exposed, it is actually very considerately written by Tippett in that it gives the treble soloist as much help as possible while preserving his very effective and striking inspiration for the piece.
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Anna
Originally posted by Gabriel Jackson View PostThat was very harsh of DracoM, wasn't it, calling so many people riff-raff?
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Simon
Originally posted by Gabriel Jackson View PostSaying "I have been singing in choirs for 50 years" with no further explanation of which choirs, singing what, under whose direction etc. and expecting that statement, in itself, to confer some weight of expertise, is absurd.
I'd find both of these a bit too much to accept, personally.
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Originally posted by Simon View PostOnly if you believe that after singing for 50 years one has learned nothing, experienced nothing, and accumulated no insight. Or if you believe that in all that time, the standard of music in said choirs has been so uniformly abysmal that any experience and knowledge gained has been worthless.
I'd find both of these a bit too much to accept, personally.
If I said "I have read a daily newspaper for forty years" as authority for some statement I was making, without declaring which paper, how could anyone assess what knowledge (and perhaps, even, understanding) I had gleaned from that newspaper. If it were from The Sun, for example, it would be very different from what might be learned from the Guardian.
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Simon
I can't argue with that, Gabriel - though I'm sure you'd accept that after forty years even those who had read the Guardian might have (if only accidentally) grasped some concept based on common sense and reality...
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Originally posted by Simon View PostI'm sure you'd accept that after forty years even those who had read the Guardian might have (if only accidentally) grasped some concept based on common sense and reality...It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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