Antal Dorati and the Detroit Symphony Bartok Miraculous Mandarin on Decca
Desert Island Discs
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by EdgeleyRob View Post
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostGood grief - I'm amazed to see that 5 of my 8 are more or less the same....
As Edgey said towards the end of that original Thread that it might be updated to accommodate Forumistas' changing choices, would there be any objections to my merging the two DID Threads?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Roussel Symphony No.1 (Bollon)
Honegger Symphony No.4 (Luisi)
Martinu Symphony No.4 (Meister)
Bruckner Symphony No.2 (1877 Version, Venzago)
Bruckner Symphony No.4 (1874 version, Norrington)
Mozart Symphony No.29 (SWR/Norrington)
Haydn Symphony No.48; Symphony No.64 (HS/Fey)
LUXURY - Solar Powered Macbook
BOOK…Complete 12 Issues of “Your Cat” Magazine for any one year. But can I have a digital subscription instead…? And if you can have WiFi, why do you need books anyway....?
And then you realise you probably won't be lost for very long anyway and....
I guess we have to chuck out the WiFi for Desert Islands to serve any further aesthetic or fantastical purpose...
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Restricting myself to single Bach and Haydn choices .....
Hymn ' He who would Valiant be ' ( any good choir )
Elgar - Violin Concerto ( Zukerman / LPO / Barenboim )
RVW - A Sea Symphony ( Boult first recording )
Dusty Springfield - I only want to be with you
Genesis - Supper's Ready ( live version from Seconds Out )
Bach - Well Tempered Clavier ( Sviatoslav Richter )
Haydn - Symphony No 82 ( CMW / Harnoncourt )
Schumann - Dichterliebe ( Holzmair / Cooper )
Luxury - Zeiss 7 x 42 Dialyt Binoculars. Simply the best !
Book - Ideally, all 17 volumes of the wonderful ' Handbook of the Birds of the World '
but I'll settle for the rather more portable - Lars Jonsson ' Birds of Europe , with North Africa and the Middle East 'Last edited by AmpH; 13-01-18, 20:48.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI'm relieved that four years ago, I still had the same attitude as I have today - and the "if I could only take one" choice, of course, is the same.
As Edgey said towards the end of that original Thread that it might be updated to accommodate Forumistas' changing choices, would there be any objections to my merging the two DID Threads?
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Going by the original Bbm idea (if I've got it right) of individual performances that hold significance:
Butterworth: The Banks of Green Willow (whichever performance was played, unannouced, about 1966, when there was no play in a test match due to rain; the most beautiful thing I'd ever heard - I was 13)
Josef Suk: A Fairytale (a Supraphon recording heard first about 1968)
Smetana: From Bohemia's Woods and Fields (ditto)
Borodin: Symphony 2 (Ansermet/ORSM - about 1971)
Simon & Garfunkel: The Boxer (1969 - the first 'pop' record I ever bought)
Harry Belafonte singing Mary's Boy Child (which I knew from the 1950s. I also knew that it was written by Jester Hairston, and that the arrangement on the Belafonte disc was beautiful - especially the clarinet solo)
Finzi: Clarinet Concerto (Michael Collins coming second in the first-ever Young Musician of the year. But the music was an eye (ear?) opener.
RVW: The Wasps Ov. (Cond. Sargent)
There's some particularly significant works, still dear to my heart.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post
OK with you, Bbm?
Of course I'm thinking of threads that are set up with innocent ignorance of the original thread and a while later than the original. For example, when I recently started up threads on Mahler 9 and Bruckner 6, I searched both in the respective composer sections and more generally, but could not see an existing thread. We wouldn't want new threads to be started mischievously!
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostWith recent experience in mind, may I suggest that consideration is given to renaming a duplication thread as II? It strikes me that although the subject matter may be the same, the discussion and feel (and often contributors) are different.
Of course I'm thinking of threads that are set up with innocent ignorance of the original thread and a while later than the original. For example, when I recently started up threads on Mahler 9 and Bruckner 6, I searched both in the respective composer sections and more generally, but could not see an existing thread. We wouldn't want new threads to be started mischievously!Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostIf there is a duplication, I do not mind at all. I should have searched in the first place! Call this one DID II?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostButterworth: The Banks of Green Willow (whichever performance was played, unannouced, about 1966, when there was no play in a test match due to rain; the most beautiful thing I'd ever heard - I was 13)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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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostGoing by the original Bbm idea (if I've got it right) of individual performances that hold significance:
Butterworth: The Banks of Green Willow (whichever performance was played, unannouced, about 1966, when there was no play in a test match due to rain; the most beautiful thing I'd ever heard - I was 13)
Josef Suk: A Fairytale (a Supraphon recording heard first about 1968)
Smetana: From Bohemia's Woods and Fields (ditto)
Borodin: Symphony 2 (Ansermet/ORSM - about 1971)
Simon & Garfunkel: The Boxer (1969 - the first 'pop' record I ever bought)
Harry Belafonte singing Mary's Boy Child (which I knew from the 1950s. I also knew that it was written by Jester Hairston, and that the arrangement on the Belafonte disc was beautiful - especially the clarinet solo)
Finzi: Clarinet Concerto (Michael Collins coming second in the first-ever Young Musician of the year. But the music was an eye (ear?) opener.
RVW: The Wasps Ov. (Cond. Sargent)
There's some particularly significant works, still dear to my heart.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostThere weren't many Banks of Green Willow available in 1966, but I would hazard a guess at LPO Boult on Decca!Last edited by Pabmusic; 14-01-18, 17:19.
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