Originally posted by Il Grande Inquisitor
View Post
Famous People I've Sat by at a Concert
Collapse
X
-
Osborn
-
Jean-Bernard Pommier sat close to us for the 2nd half (Brahms 3) of a Halle concert at the Bridgewater Hall last year,after he had played the Schumann concerto in the 1st half.
Gordon Burns (remeber him ? Krypton factor,local news presenter in Manchester) was sat about 3 seats away from us at a Beethoven 8 & 9 concert a few years ago.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Osborn View PostThat would have made me happy
Originally posted by Osborn View PostWhat a daft thread! Shouldn't you be tweeting to Breakfast rather than publishing here? Were you London cabbies in earlier life?
It's actually quite a fun little thread, ain't is Ossie?
If non-concert events are permitted, I recently filed out of the Olivier Theatre at the NT just behind a gaudily-attired Michael Portillo... waiting to order at the bar ahead was the Rt Hon. G. Osborne... and so I was able to see and hear Portaloo glide up behind him, grasp him and murmur plummily "Chancellor..." ...
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
Comment
-
-
scottycelt
If that Bruckner 5 was Abbado/Berlin Phil, I was there too ... unbelievably sloppy performance, in truth ... not telling who was sitting next to me though ...
No, it wasn't Amateur51 ..
Comment
-
amateur51
Originally posted by Caliban View PostAnd yet....
I 'ad that 'Ellen Grimmo in the back of me cab...
It's actually quite a fun little thread, ain't is Ossie?
If non-concert events are permitted, I recently filed out of the Olivier Theatre at the NT just behind a gaudily-attired Michael Portillo... waiting to order at the bar ahead was the Rt Hon. G. Osborne... and so I was able to see and hear Portaloo glide up behind him, grasp him and murmur plummily "Chancellor..." ...
tuktuktuktuk
Comment
-
Originally posted by amateur51 View PostA remarkable feat given that his tongue must have been otherwise engaged
tuktuktuktuk"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Osborn View PostThat would have made me happy; a brilliant, brilliant pianist to hear live when fired up; I heard her perform a wonderful Brahms PC 1 not long ago. Mind you she has her moments - notably recording Mozart PCs with Abbado, refusing to back down on using Busoni cadenzas and getting dismissed from 3 engagements at (pretty much) Abbado's Lucerne Fesrival (all fees paid in full). I'll hear her again in the Spring (long wait!)
The one he wrote for Mozart K467 1st movement ( Piano Concerto no 21 in C - I refuse to give it its 20thC 'invented' sub-title) is the only Cadenza in all classical music I know that actually makes me tearful ...not tearful as in 'sad' but simply marvelling at its inventiveness, its superb harmonic mastery, and its confident re-working of traditional 18th century formulae
If you want to hear this wonderful cadenza, played superbly, I can recommend Annie Fischer's sublime recording ( of the whole concerto obviously) with the Philharmonia and Sawallisch.
Hopefully it will be available on 'Amazon' or such, but I will investigate.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by waldhorn View Post. . . I can recommend Annie Fischer's sublime recording ( of the whole concerto obviously) with the Philharmonia and Sawallisch. . .
Mozart: PC No. 22 K482, Annie Fischer, PO, conductor W. Sawallisch
R3: 27 Oct 2012 8.20pm (should be on iPlayer)My life, each morning when I dress, is four and twenty hours less. (J Richardson)
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by waldhorn View PostI too once sat a row behind Helene Grimaud.. and why should she not have been allowed to play those superb Busoni cadenzas?
The one he wrote for Mozart K467 1st movement ( Piano Concerto no 21 in C - I refuse to give it its 20thC 'invented' sub-title) is the only Cadenza in all classical music I know that actually makes me tearful ...not tearful as in 'sad' but simply marvelling at its inventiveness, its superb harmonic mastery, and its confident re-working of traditional 18th century formulae
If you want to hear this wonderful cadenza, played superbly, I can recommend Annie Fischer's sublime recording ( of the whole concerto obviously) with the Philharmonia and Sawallisch.
Hopefully it will be available on 'Amazon' or such, but I will investigate.Last edited by salymap; 30-10-12, 07:57.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by waldhorn View PostI too once sat a row behind Helene Grimaud.. and why should she not have been allowed to play those superb Busoni cadenzas?
Surprising story this as well, considering that Isabelle Faust in a recent "CD Review" interview with Andrew McGregor said how much interpretative freedom Abbado had allowed her in their recent recording of the Beethoven and Berg VCs. Perhaps, La Belle Helene unearthed another side to the usually placid maestro; or more probably, how Abbado was content to give Faust her head so long as her ideas agreed with his.
Comment
-
Comment