Prom 70: Grażyna Bacewicz / Tchaikovsky / Prokofiev, BBC NOW, Radulović / Martín

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • bluestateprommer
    Full Member
    • Nov 2010
    • 3009

    Prom 70: Grażyna Bacewicz / Tchaikovsky / Prokofiev, BBC NOW, Radulović / Martín

    Thursday 12 September 2024
    18:30
    Royal Albert Hall

    Grażyna Bacewicz: Overture
    Tchaikovsky: Violin Concerto in D major, op. 35
    [Encore: Traditional Serbian dance - 'Pašona kolo']

    Interval

    Prokofiev: Romeo and Juliet, op. 64 (selections)

    Nemanja Radulović, violin
    BBC National Orchestra of Wales
    Jaime Martín, conductor

    Jaime Martín conducts the BBC National Orchestra of Wales in dramatic highlights from Prokofiev’s ballet Romeo and Juliet, while Nemanja Radulović sets off fireworks as the soloist in Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto.




    Live at the BBC Proms: The BBC National Orchestra of Wales & conductor Jaime Martín.
    Starts
    12-09-24 18:30
    Ends
    12-09-24 20:30
    Location
    Royal Albert Hall
    Last edited by bluestateprommer; 12-09-24, 18:28. Reason: added encore
  • edashtav
    Full Member
    • Jul 2012
    • 3670

    #2
    Almost caught out by the early start.

    Nemanja Radulović (violin)
    BBC National Orchestra of Wales
    Jaime Martín (conductor)

    I know and like Grazyna Bacewicz's music: linear, compact, Bartok with a Polish heart. I have some CDs of Bacewicz and a very battered full score of one of her piano concertos. Her overture is an efficient starter that explodes like champagne being roughly uncorked. BBC NOW under conductor Jaime Martin poured out her wine which cheered us all as we knocked in back in one. :irony3:

    Comment

    • edashtav
      Full Member
      • Jul 2012
      • 3670

      #3
      Nemanja Radulović (violin)
      BBC National Orchestra of Wales
      Jaime Martín (conductor)

      Nemanja's violin was very much searchlighted by the BBC engineers. His secure technique withstood this attention. I felt the first violins in the orchestra gained a boost,too from the soloist's mic. The woodwind were a tad recessed. The first movement and its cadenza were efficiently despatched by Nemanja and Co. with one notable, tender moment at the return of the first flute after the cadenza. That relaxed Nemanja who finished the coda in fine and individual style: CUE enthusiastic applause.

      The slow movement had all the relaxed charm of a couple cudfling and kissing on a Spanish beach on a sultry Summer evening. The duets between soloist and woodwind were very affectionate. AND THEN:
      The Arrival.of the Russian Dancers destroys the calm. A duet between oboe and clarinet reminded the violinist of his days of passion.
      The interpretation"s intensity and individually grew as it progressed from run of the mill to memorable. An old warhorse had been hosed down and well-groomed.

      I was pleased that I had tuned in.

      Encore: "Pašona kolo" Serbian Round Dance arranged by an accordian player for violinist, strings and heels.(title thanks to bsp)

      Comment

      • edashtav
        Full Member
        • Jul 2012
        • 3670

        #4
        Interval talk
        Martin Handley’s guest for the interval is Sophie Duncan, a Research Fellow at the University of Oxford and author of a book called Searching for Juliet: The Lives and Deaths of Shakespeare’s First Tragic Heroine
        A useful conversation that helped me to gain a more rounded idea of Juliet.

        Prokofiev: Romeo and Juliet, op. 64 (selections)

        Nemanja Radulović, violin
        BBC National Orchestra of Wales
        Jaime Martín, conductor
        I've seen Prokofiev's ballet in the grand surrounding of the Roman Amphitheatre at Verona, having bought a mono Supraphon LP of various movements conducted I think by Ancerl when I was Uni in 1968. His exciting interpretations were marred by a recorded sound that was strident.

        Tonight's performance was well'paced and idiomatic. It was a decent introduction to the transparent score that is very melodic with plenty of dancing rhythms. The crowd in the RAH seemed young and left the hall in a happy mood. Job done!

        Comment

        • edashtav
          Full Member
          • Jul 2012
          • 3670

          #5
          I thought Forumistas might be interested in a review of the BBC Concert in February, 1937, when the composer conducted the first performance in Britain ,excepting Belfast, of a suite from his Shakespeare Ballet that had been successfully staged in Moscow the previous year. The reviewer I suspect was Edwin Evans:

          "THE NEW PROKOFIEV
          BBC Concert Wednesday— Half of this evening’s BBC symphony concert was a Prokofiev programme conducted by the composer. Two periods of his output were represented. The popular Classique [a.k.a Classical Symphony] was written twenty-one years ago The other works performed were of recent date. Meanwhile, he is said to be striving after simplicity and melodiousness and has achieved a certain measure of both but in so doing sacrificed a great deal pungency and— let us be frank— the somewhat impertinent charm of his earlier days.

          The ballet Romeo and Juliet, the second suite from which followed may be simple and may be melodious in a rather obvious way but it is frankly dull and no eccentricities of orchestration are going to retrieve it from dullness.

          The second violin concerto of which Robert Soetens played the solo admirably is rather more interesting but still less than many of the composer’s earlier works The best of them are lyrical and the frequency the Classique is played place it above the ballet. But, on the whole, Prokofiev proved disappointing.

          A performance the “ Eroica” under Sir Adrian Boult concluded the concert E E "

          Comment

          • gedsmk
            Full Member
            • Dec 2010
            • 203

            #6
            Again, like the Tchaikowsky 6 the other night, really lovely balancing and sound engineering. The entire season has been a joy to listen to on my high-end system. They seem to be able to capture the "space" of the RAH really well. I did wonder if they might experiment this year with surround sound broadcasts (which really were incredible) but apparently not.

            Comment

            • Ein Heldenleben
              Full Member
              • Apr 2014
              • 6785

              #7
              Originally posted by edashtav View Post
              I thought Forumistas might be interested in a review of the BBC Concert in February, 1937, when the composer conducted the first performance in Britain ,excepting Belfast, of a suite from his Shakespeare Ballet that had been successfully staged in Moscow the previous year. The reviewer I suspect was Edwin Evans:

              "THE NEW PROKOFIEV
              BBC Concert Wednesday— Half of this evening’s BBC symphony concert was a Prokofiev programme conducted by the composer. Two periods of his output were represented. The popular Classique [a.k.a Classical Symphony] was written twenty-one years ago The other works performed were of recent date. Meanwhile, he is said to be striving after simplicity and melodiousness and has achieved a certain measure of both but in so doing sacrificed a great deal pungency and— let us be frank— the somewhat impertinent charm of his earlier days.

              The ballet Romeo and Juliet, the second suite from which followed may be simple and may be melodious in a rather obvious way but it is frankly dull and no eccentricities of orchestration are going to retrieve it from dullness.

              The second violin concerto of which Robert Soetens played the solo admirably is rather more interesting but still less than many of the composer’s earlier works The best of them are lyrical and the frequency the Classique is played place it above the ballet. But, on the whole, Prokofiev proved disappointing.

              A performance the “ Eroica” under Sir Adrian Boult concluded the concert E E "
              That’s odd because I think Prokofiev’s music for Romeo and Juliet is amongst the very greatest in the genre - up there with Swan Lake. It works better with dancers though.I’d love to know precisely what he objected to..

              Comment

              • jonfan
                Full Member
                • Dec 2010
                • 1430

                #8
                Originally posted by gedsmk View Post
                Again, like the Tchaikowsky 6 the other night, really lovely balancing and sound engineering. The entire season has been a joy to listen to on my high-end system. They seem to be able to capture the "space" of the RAH really well. I did wonder if they might experiment this year with surround sound broadcasts (which really were incredible) but apparently not.

                Totally agree. The listening has been a real joy and justifies to my ears spending on a high quality end system when the source is so good. The RAH space emphasises the distinctiveness of each performing group when the engineering is of high quality.

                to the unnamed sound managers!


                Comment

                Working...
                X