Originally posted by Bryn
View Post
Prom 70: Wednesday 7th September at 7.00 p.m. (Bridge, Birtwistle, Holst)
Collapse
X
-
Ariosto
-
Originally posted by Bryn View PostAnd why should he not? Too much "I am a real classical music lover" bigotry in going on in this thread, and others seeking to tell paying audience members when not to applaud. Apart from anything else, The Planets is a suite from which individual pieces are often played alone. Get a grip, you moaning Minnies, and start concentrating on the music rather than how your fellow audience members show their appreciation for it.
Yes movements from The Planets are often extracted and played as bleeding chunks but the work was conceived as a whole. I am usually fairly relaxed about applause at the Proms but in this instance I found the applause between almost every section infuriating. Spontaneous applause at the end of an outstanding performance of a movement is one thing but the clapping during The Planets seemed to me to be quote mindless.
(They wouldn't have dared if Colin Davis or Haitink, etc had been conducting.)
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by BudgieJane View PostThat was someone fainting.
S-A
Comment
-
-
prokkyshosty
Indeed, that was the very moment that it happened. Hmm. Is it possible that the RAH organ is capable of emitting a derivation of -- and forgive me please for sullying this forum with this idea -- the infamous "brown note"?
Comment
-
Originally posted by Bryn View PostAnd why should he not? Too much "I am a real classical music lover" bigotry in going on in this thread, and others seeking to tell paying audience members when not to applaud. Apart from anything else, The Planets is a suite from which individual pieces are often played alone. Get a grip, you moaning Minnies, and start concentrating on the music rather than how your fellow audience members show their appreciation for it.
I remember someone hitting the deck like a sack of spuds (last year, I think it was) towards the end of the Tonhalle Mahler 4. I seem to recall those near him recounting that he came to instantly and valiantly declined all offered assistance until after the music had died away. A real trouper!"...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..."
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by prokkyshosty View Postthe infamous "brown note"?"...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..."
Comment
-
-
prokkyshosty
Entirely mythical, but nonetheless rumours exist of low frequency acoustic resonance testing by Nazis, Americans, etc. for use in sound bombs to induce, erm, nausea on the battlefield.
This organ seems to have met with more success: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M1zq3n--HFI
Comment
-
cavatina
Originally posted by prokkyshosty View Posthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brown_note
Entirely mythical, but nonetheless rumours exist of low frequency acoustic resonance testing by Nazis, Americans, etc. for use in sound bombs to induce, erm, nausea on the battlefield.
:
Comment
-
It is interesting to read of the effect of low notes on the anatomy as I have never felt lower discomfort with amplified music possibly because I have usually danced at the same time and not noticed an effect. I did feel a threatened loosening of the bowels on different occasions when I tried the "Earthquake" machine at the Science Museum. The oddest abdominal effect I occasionally feel is hearing certain bass singers in close proximity. Raimund Herincx caused this years ago whilst singing in Belshazzar's Feast at a Prom. I was pretty fit then but my guts were shaken up by the wobble induced. It next happened in 1968 when Solti conducted Verdi's Don Carlos at a Prom and I was faced by the combined forces of basses David Ward, Peter Glossop, Glynne Thomas, David Kelly and several other soloists at close range. Singing in operas myself I have been able to control it by firming the muscles, for example when Sarastro was booming at me. The most recent concert occasion was this year's BBCPO Rachmaninov Prom with Noseda when that fabulous Russian bass Alexei Tanovitski sang in Spring and The Bells (mind you, there is less to hold my belly firm these days).
Comment
-
-
The RAH 64ft stop (3 octaves below the lowest note on a piano), a flue as opposed to a reed, is acoustically "manufactured" from a 32ft and a 21 2/3 ft stop - a physicist will give you the science behind it! Similarly, some instrumemts have a pedal acoustic 32ft made from a 16ft and a 10 1/3ft.
I am not aware of a full length 64ft flue stop anywhere, think of the wood/metal needed to make it and you'll appreciate the cost for a sensation rather than a sound. The only 64ft reed I know of is in the Hill instrument in Sydney Town Hall and on its own occupies the far left hand side of the chamber. When drawn to underpin full organ on some notes you are aware of a broadening out of the pedal sound and a subterranean rumble. Incidentally, at one point this stop was out of tune (how one would tune it anyway I have no idea!) and sounding as a half length 128ft!!
Comment
-
-
I recall experiencing that RAH organ sound as pulsating shockwaves.
From cavatina's recommended link:
"Another promising [sic] technology is high-powered acoustic generators that are used to produce infrasound (below 20 hertz and inaudible). The low frequency, high decibel sound is emitted in bands that resonate in certain body cavities, causing the disturbance of body organs, visual blurrings and nausea. These effects, becoming more severe as the decibel level increases, range from temporary discomfort that disappears after a few moments to permanent damage or lethality".
Heavy dub bass has these kinds of effects on me, as in car beatboxes - the usual alert in my case being panic. Really scary stuff, since we can't know of whether or from what source it is being used, and the deep sounds just perceptible as loudspeaker rumbles may conceal deeper sounds of the kinds described! We ignore the potentially harmful effects of sound, especially "inaudible sound".
Comment
-
Comment