Originally posted by cavatina
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Prom 51: Monday 22nd August 2011 at 7.30 p.m. (Wagner, Liszt, Volans, Brahms)
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Originally posted by Jonathan View PostI thought the Liszt was excellent (then again, I would). I missed the Wagner and the Brahms but intend to listen again (assuming it's working ok now) before it vanishes into the ether forever...
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostEarly on he was somewhat influenced by Stockhausen but later, to replenish himself, he engaged with African music, especially rhythmically, simplifying his harmonic idiom in some parallels with Steve Reich.
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BudgieJane
Originally posted by Oddball View PostI'm quite envious of your mental attitude. The Proms for me are good fun, but only on the basis of having a season ticket which allows me to walk in 15 minutes before the performance. Any longer wait would produce serious mental distress.
There's a whole bunch of us season-ticket holders who have become friends through queuing all afternoon through all weathers. We enjoy these afternoons (yes, even in the pouring rain and howling gales) by chatting, playing cards and drinking wine. The whole idea is the avoidance of stress and its accompanying mental distress. Any time you decide to queue, introduce yourself to us and enjoy a totally new promming experience.
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Jane Sullivan,
I'm usually a bit further down the queue, as I don't want to be too close, but i usually greet you lot! I confess slyly that I sometimes wonder as I stroll past, whether any of you are completely sober and suitably appreciative by 7.30 ! Critical powers in jeopardy?
Bws. to all,
Ferret
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3rd Viennese School
Just heard the repeat of the Kevin Volans here in my very own office. Did I get any peace from colleagues during this time? Did I bxxxxxxx.
3VS
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Lateralthinking1
An interesting interview with Kevin Volans on The Weekend Strand programme. I rather wish that I had taken notice of that part of this Prom now. The programme was broadcast on the World Service earlier this morning. If anyone wants to listen to it, it can be found on the I-Player here - http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode...nd_27_08_2011/Last edited by Guest; 30-08-11, 01:24.
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Kind of interesting that no one else seems to have caught on to this tidbit from David Nice's review of this Prom from The Arts Desk (emphasis mine):
The Arts Desk’s team of professional critics offer unrivalled review coverage, in-depth interviews and features on popular music, classical, art, theatre, comedy, opera, comedy and dance. Dedicated art form pages, readers’ comments, What’s On and our user-friendly theatre and film recommendations
".....I hadn't heard that the BBCSO's chief conductor Jiří Bělohlávek was taking a month off to recover from a virus. So it was a bracing last-minute shock to find the man stepping up to the podium to conduct Wagner's Meistersinger Prelude not the orchestra's wise Hans Sachs but a Walther von Stolzing in conducting terms, tipped unexpectedly by one source outside the BBC as Bělohlávek's successor. Lean and hungry Dane Thomas Dausgaard masterminded the most brilliantly co-ordinated Prom I heard last year, and he excelled again last night."
"Whether or not he does indeed become the BBCSO's new chief conductor - one player I bumped into afterwards, contradicting my outside source, thought it unlikely - they could do worse than work with him at least a couple of times every season."
The Wagner was OK, brisker here and there than what I'm used to. However, I was rather surprised to find how much I enjoyed Dausgaard's interpretation of Brahms 1, especially as I fall more into the "like" category on the "Aimez-vous Brahms?" scale. Unlike others here, I didn't think that it dragged at all, and his including the first movement exposition repeat was a nice surprise. There was a blend of mild "HIPster" elements, like the relatively brisk opening which wasn't overly heavy, but also the traditional slowing down of the big theme in the finale. No complaints about quality playing there.
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