Originally posted by Richard Barrett
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Musical confessions
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In 1973 or 74 when I was in my first year at university, Simon Rattle phoned asking if I would play Cor Anglais in an orchestra he was geting together for a performance of The Rite. I confess that I turned him down, saying that I was too busy studying (and didn't feel competent enough ).
I've always regretted not having made the effortPacta sunt servanda !!!
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post.
... I too loved W Carlos. Some seven years ago I got this, for £25. Much recommended. Tho' I fear it's not as cheap now...
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Also very happy to hear that Mr Barrett thinks there's no shame in liking Carlos...one thing he/she did was scrupulously respect the scores, however much the sounds changed. And I find it fascinating to hear parts of the score in the Brandenburgs that I'd never noticed before.
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Originally posted by MickyD View PostStrange to go from electronic instruments to period ones.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... Beecham may have done many good things for this Land ohne Musik - but he does not endear himself to very many of us because of his "witticisms" - which sadly bespeak a small-minded and rather unpleasant human being...
Here are some sayings of another C20 musician. I think some of them fatuous and unpleasant but I don't in the least think they invalidate what he achieved in music:
The great conductor and composer was someone who was never shy of saying exactly what he thought. Here, in a piece originally published in 2015, are some of his most notorious pronouncements
Plenty of composers and performers have said daft things, just like the rest of us. It doesn't lessen their achievement.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... Beecham may have done many good things for this Land ohne Musik - but he does not endear himself to very many of us because of his "witticisms" - which sadly bespeak a small-minded and rather unpleasant human being...
I remember watching a BBC4 documentary about Delius and thinking how much better it would have been if someone other than the odious Beecham had championed his music.
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Originally posted by aeolium View PostPlenty of composers and performers have said daft things, just like the rest of us. It doesn't lessen their achievement.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThis is true of course. But there are also those of us who regard much of Beecham's musical "achievement" as questionable to say the least.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostWhy? His legacy of Delius recordings is by any measure pretty damned good!
IMV Delius would have done better with someone with a bit more respect for him and his music
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostHe was an odious, pompous character with questionable musical ability (not that i'm an expert on him at all)
IMV Delius would have done better with someone with a bit more respect for him and his music
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostAny suggestions who might have done it. Beecham championed Delius' work for at least 25 years whilst he was alive and another 25 after his death. Not a bad record methinks, particularly as for many years Delius got very little recognition in the UK.
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Originally posted by Flay View PostIn 1973 or 74 when I was in my first year at university, Simon Rattle phoned asking if I would play Cor Anglais in an orchestra he was geting together for a performance of The Rite. I confess that I turned him down, saying that I was too busy studying (and didn't feel competent enough ).
I've always regretted not having made the effort
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostActually though I don't think it is. Both involve what might be called a greater concentration on the timbral qualities of music, and in particular a kind of timbral heterogeneity as opposed to the ideal of smoothness and continuity of timbre that grew up through the later 19th and early 20th centuries. At least that's how I would explain my own attachment to baroque music as well as electronics.
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