I wonder how many contributors to this forum will agree that the two Haitink Brahms Proms with the Chamber Orchestra of Europe have displayed musicianship and musical taste at an inspirational level. It was hard also to remember anything more musically convivial than the Emmanuel Ax-orchestra-Haitinl relationship. We will be keeping our recordings of both concerts for a very long time.
Hence the extreme dismay at the Derham Brahms interlude, presumably inspired by the producer. Ms Derham took herself at BBC expense (our expense) to Vienna where she sat at the foot of the ghastly Brahms "monument" and muttered platitudes about him. Then a short scene followed with her in the usual cafe muttering some more. We were also treated to brief extracts from the Hollywood take on the Great Brahms-Clara Schumann Story of a Relationship. The extracts were an insult to the intelligence of every Promenader and to every musical BBC listener. Injected between sublime musical performance they seemed to destroy the very cultural basis of the BBC. Certainly they destroyed for us Ms Derham's credibility as someone maintaining the intellectual standards of Newnham and being pushed by inane influences to indulge in pure crap. I'm reminded of a story about someone in Cambridge when C P Snow made one of his public utterances: "doesn't he know he's selling the pass"? came the question. "He doesn't know there is a pass to be sold", came the reply.
Hence the extreme dismay at the Derham Brahms interlude, presumably inspired by the producer. Ms Derham took herself at BBC expense (our expense) to Vienna where she sat at the foot of the ghastly Brahms "monument" and muttered platitudes about him. Then a short scene followed with her in the usual cafe muttering some more. We were also treated to brief extracts from the Hollywood take on the Great Brahms-Clara Schumann Story of a Relationship. The extracts were an insult to the intelligence of every Promenader and to every musical BBC listener. Injected between sublime musical performance they seemed to destroy the very cultural basis of the BBC. Certainly they destroyed for us Ms Derham's credibility as someone maintaining the intellectual standards of Newnham and being pushed by inane influences to indulge in pure crap. I'm reminded of a story about someone in Cambridge when C P Snow made one of his public utterances: "doesn't he know he's selling the pass"? came the question. "He doesn't know there is a pass to be sold", came the reply.
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