Heard the 1st half only driving home. Yes Mary the announcer got it wrong with the Traveller and Samaritan, nothing surprises me any more. Colin Matthews was vague and 'not with it' and the Talbot arrangement of the Purcell seemed pointless. The Cantata seemed to get quite a good performance and Alan Oke did sound remarkably like Pears in places! The Sinfonia da Requiem's performance seemed pretty good, except what went wrong at the start of the Requiem Aeternam in the woodwind?
Prom 41: Sunday 14th August 2011 at 7.00 p.m. (Purcell, Britten)
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Alan Oke didn't sound enough like Pears for my taste! He did a really good job with Waters Above and When Will My May Come, both great favourites of mine, but I could have done with a greater dramatic flourish in his first and last pieces. I enjoyed the performance in general, though - it always makes me smile. Good birds and whistling, and the boys sounded fine, though I still couldn't hear them in Sumer is Icumen In.
Speaking of announcers/presenters getting things wrong, Sara M-P said this afternoon in the Proms Plus programme that Britten conducted this programme in 1936! Now that would have been clever. She did correct it (to 1963), though without mentioning she'd got it wrong the first time.
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Originally posted by rauschwerk View PostI was at that 1963 Prom and remember it well....
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Just in from the hall. Much as I admire JB and his work with the BBC Symphony, Mark Wigglesworth was an excellent replacement and generated fine performances in all four works. The tension generated in the Sinfonia was impressive, as were the orchestral and choral contributions throughout. Standing four rows back in the arena, I too could have done with more volume from the boys in the last movement of the symphony (45 of them if I counted correctly) but their singing in the earlier movements was exemplary. A last minute decision to go, which was well justified.
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cavatina
Speaking of announcers/presenters getting things wrong, Sara M-P said this afternoon in the Proms Plus programme that Britten conducted this programme in 1936! Now that would have been clever. She did correct it (to 1963), though without mentioning she'd got it wrong the first time.
Originally posted by mercia View PostI'm trying to think of any other "classical" piece that involves whistling .............. anyone?
Why certainly...Charles Ives "Memories":
Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.
I have a horrible feeling this is going to stick in my head as I'm waiting for the concert tomorrow...thanks a lot!
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cavatina
Originally posted by prokkyshosty View PostMary, indeed, how loud the boys will be with their 'icuming' Sumer is what I'm most curious about in tonight's performance. I've only ever heard this live once before, and the boys were completely lost in the mix.
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What did people feel about the Chacony by "Purcell, arr.Joby Talbot"? (Or was it the the "Chacony, after Purcell" by Joby Talbot, as the Proms website has been changed to, though not in the printed programme on sale tonight.)
I was encouraged to read Talbot's note in the programme about re-creating the sounds of an earlier era, but I didn't think he actually achieved that. The bells sounded stridently modern, and he seemed to be trying to squeeze in every possible orchestral cliché into the 7 minutes. Indeed the size of orchestra required for such a short piece was absurd. If he wanted to create the sounds of a pre-Purcell band, he should have written for a much smaller outfit such as the AAM or Jordi Savall's team. It was interesting to hear the familiar piece in a new guise, but seemed in the end to be pointless and self-indulgent.
Mark Wigglesworth seemed to be gesturing towards (presumably) Talbot in the stalls at the end, but the applause didn't last long enough to enable the arranger/composer to take a bow. Not a good sign at a world premiere.
Thank goodness for the excellent Britten that followed.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostAnd now, specially for Peter Pears devotees
However, you could always try the real thing in this rather wonderful clip from 1956. I hope the Japanese subtitles help
Part 1: Here are the first songs from Britten's settings of the "Seven Sonnets of Michelangelo", Op. 22. This is rare video footage of these two great artis...
Or perhaps more suitably for this thread, some Purcell. I particularly enjoy the second song here, 'Man is for the woman made'. I think they enjoyed that one.
Rare video footage of these two great artists from Japanese television, 9 February 1956. The concert also featured Britten's "Michelangelo Sonnets" with som...
Off-topic I know, but I couldn't resist.Last edited by Mary Chambers; 15-08-11, 07:35.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Mary Chambers View PostI love that Dudley Moore parody!
However, you could always try the real thing in this rather wonderful clip from 1956. I hope the Japanese subtitles help
Part 1: Here are the first songs from Britten's settings of the "Seven Sonnets of Michelangelo", Op. 22. This is rare video footage of these two great artis...
Or perhaps more suitably for this thread, some Purcell. I particularly enjoy the second song here, 'Man is for the woman made'. I think they enjoyed that one.
Rare video footage of these two great artists from Japanese television, 9 February 1956. The concert also featured Britten's "Michelangelo Sonnets" with som...
Off-topic I know, but I couldn't resist.
By way of return, I found this, which is pretty remarkable
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostThanks for the Japanese clip Mary - I've not seen that before - stunning.
By way of return, I found this, which is pretty remarkable
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MFaH-...eature=related
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Having woken up now and gathered my thoughts from last night's prom(as I mentioned earlier, that I was attending), I would give this %90! When you see that the conductor and two of the soloists were replaced at a comparitively short noticed,i thought rather amazing achievement. IMO, theonly work that suffered was the Purcell/Joby Talbot commission. Maybe not much rehearsal time was allotted, because the playing was quite scrappy,players miscued, and tuning was in evidence here. But, as soon as the first Britten piece begun they were in a different league. Where they should be. From this point onwards, it went very well indeed. Could'nt fault, although, in the final movement, the hunting horn player fluffed one entry. I am nip picking here I know, but there were several discrepencies here and there but it was
Overall, a marvellous evening of live music!!Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostThanks for the Japanese clip Mary - I've not seen that before - stunning.
By way of return, I found this, which is pretty remarkable
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MFaH-...eature=related
I'm very grateful to the people who invented the means of seeing this sort of historic footage. It's so valuable.
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