Good post EH. Still friends. Rarely do I bring gender into my conversation but most favoured performances of late have come from the likes of Rachel Barton-Pine, Nicola Benedetti and Tasmin Little. Maybe I found an undefinable feminine quality missing tonight.
Prom 51: J. Weir/R. Schumann/Elgar, BBC SO, Tetzlaff/Oramo, Thurs 24 Aug 2023
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Originally posted by Alison View PostGood post EH. Still friends. Rarely do I bring gender into my conversation but most favoured performances of late have come from the likes of Rachel Barton-Pine, Nicola Benedetti and Tasmin Little. Maybe I found an undefinable feminine quality missing tonight.
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Originally posted by bluestateprommer View Post
Nice of David Owen Norris to mention that Oramo is using antiphonal 1st and 2nd violins for this concert.
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Well, as for over-emotional, Elgar himself said his concerto was 'awfully emotional, too emotional, but I love it'. Ever a master of understatement , I think he was wary of revealing too much about his platonic relationship with Alice Stuart-Wortley.
I was interested in Alpie's remark about first and second violins. I tend to agree, and I wonder if certain conductors' strong preferences for the antiphonal placing of the violins (Sir Adrian Boult in particular) stemmed from his position on the rostrum, the one place where one hears rhe difference markedly.
Yes, some works have a lot of antiphony between firsts and seconds. But other works have antiphony between violins and cellos, ad Barbirolli and Beecham both preferred the cellos to their right Herbert von Karajan sometimes (not always) had the violas on his right front, and I think that is a good arrangement in many works.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostI was interested in Alpie's remark about first and second violins. I tend to agree, and I wonder if certain conductors' strong preferences for the antiphonal placing of the violins (Sir Adrian Boult in particular) stemmed from his position on the rostrum, the one place where one hears rhe difference markedly.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostMissed the first half but thought the Elgar was wonderful. Again a lovely string sound from the BBCSO.
What a magnificent encore.
https://www.theguardian.com/music/2023/aug/25/prom-51-bbcso-sakari-oramo-review-christian-tetzlaff-judith-weir-begin-again
I must say I tuned in and tuned out minutes later as the violin tone and intonation came across the airwaves unpleasantly, to my ears…"...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..."
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Originally posted by Nick Armstrong View Post
The Guardian reviewer agrees with you:
https://www.theguardian.com/music/2023/aug/25/prom-51-bbcso-sakari-oramo-review-christian-tetzlaff-judith-weir-begin-again
I must say I tuned in and tuned out minutes later as the violin tone and intonation came across the airwaves unpleasantly, to my ears…
You are right CT was a bit sharp in some of the final movement passage work . ‘‘Twas ever thus …
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
The tally runs
Elgar 34
Beethoven 107
Brahms 95
Mendelssohn 105
Tschaikovsky 81
Bruch 45
Even adding 4 perfs (15/128ths ) for the fifteen years the concerto was uncomposed that makes 38 . I would argue , given its greatness it’s underperformed. Hardly surprising as it long, difficult and musically very demanding .
also surprising the relatively small number of Bruch perfs given its popularity.
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Originally posted by Maclintick View PostNot sure why my personal favourite violin concerto by Sibelius doesn't make it onto your comparative list -- just shades it over Max Bruch with 47 outings at the Proms.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
Probably because I thought it was composed in the 20’s and I couldn’t be bothered to do the maths as I had with the Elgar - the work in question . Then it turns out it was written in 1905 so it was only entitled to a 10/128ths of credit - making it what 50.671875 perfs ?
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Originally posted by Maclintick View PostSeems a respectable calculation. Practically every violinist of note has recorded it and it shows no sign of dropping out of the international concert repertoire -- quite the reverse, if fact, so I'm still at a loss as to why it wasn't included, mathematical sleight-of-hand notwithstanding...
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Caught up with this last night . I thought the Weir piece was interesting and will listen to it again. I love the Spring Symphony but this did not quite thrill me . I know others have cavilled at the recording but the first movement in particular did not go with the terrific swing of the Kubelik recording.
I have not always been Tetzlaff's greatest fan as a concerto soloist - very much in the very good but not the best I have heard but I do think he has become a more emotional interesting player through his chamber music collaborations with I think his sister and the late Lars Vogt . I thought this a terrific performance , very moving in the slow movement and he handled the accompanied cadenza impeccably. Good to see another top European soloist as well as Vilde Frang playing the work when so many like Mutter don't.
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