Originally posted by salymap
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Was that REALLY worth ... ?
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostI would go for an extreme timestretch version but not the jingly nonsense
Howard Skempton is a delightful man and I wouldnt have a word said against him
On the other hand
The Dream of G******** is an abomination
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostMahler never conducted Sea Pictures; he did the Enigma in New York in 1910 or 1911.
It's easy to forget that, for many composers, writing music was not atways a subjective aesthetic act, designed to reveal the composer's innermost feelings or philosophy.
Sea Pictures is a reasonable work (three of the movements are more than that) but it shows very clear signs of haste. It was a festival commission from Norwich, commissioned when Elgar was a reasonably well regarded provincial choral composer, but delivered after the Enigma had catapulted him to national (and indeed international) fame. Elgar had never written a work for a solo singer before (nor a large-scale work for any soloist) and it was given by the 6' 2" Clara Butt, who was dressed as a mermaid. However, its composition was rushed because Elgar was diverted by the Enigma (a personal project that he undertook very unexpectedly), which occupied the period November 1898 - February 1899; and later by the need to extend the Enigma finale following its first performance in June. The Norwich Festival was in November(?) 1899, by which time Elgar had started on the commission for Birmingham that was to become Gerontius.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Hornspieler View PostSo don't bother to post on this thread. There are many other threads on Platform 3 of no relevance at all to classical music to choose to grace with your humour(?)
The fact that this topic has generated more than eighty replies in less than 24 hours would seem to indicate that this discussion is of interest to many. Please drop your clangers elsewhere, Mr GongGong.
HS
I blame the original poster - perhaps Talking About Music would have found it a better home?
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostThis thread is on Platform 3, the definition of which is 'The place to talk about anything'.
I blame the original poster - perhaps Talking About Music would have found it a better home?
On topic, but off genre, the great Johnny Cash had a few albums I bet he wished he left on the mixing desk !!I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by gradus View PostTchaik 5 and its tiresome last movement.
Mahler 8, ear-splittingly loud.
Wagner Lohengrin, b.....y boring.
Smetana Bartered Bride, see Lohengrin.
Bellini/Donizetti ditto mostly.Last edited by ahinton; 01-07-12, 20:27.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View Post... the great Johnny Cash had a few albums I bet he wished he left on the mixing desk !!Love is a burning thingand it makes a firery ringbound by wild desireI fell in to a ring of fire...I fell in to a burning ring of fireI went down,down,downan...
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Originally posted by Hornspieler View PostDo messages #75 to 78 have ANY relevence at all to the subject of this thread?
Let's just stick to the topic and keep the comedy for another thread?
HS
Of course they do
here is your question
What are your "bĂȘte noires"?
if you wanted a list then ask for one
you also said this
But the thing is, Waldhorn, that it isn't typical Tchaikowsky and it does not compare with his other three suites in style.
Maybe WAM might indeed wish that he himself had written it - it is certainly a charming work.
I would say the same about Max Reger's "Variations and Fugue on a Theme of (a)Bach, (b) Mozart, or (c)Beethoven
Some very clever orchestration, but the Provenance is suspect.
ANY relevence at all to the subject of this thread?
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