Prom 15 (25.7.12): Smetana, Prokofiev & Dvorák
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostI thought it worked well. However, previous knowledge of the quartet is bound to influence one's perception. Supposing Szell's orchestration had come first and we had just heard a string quartet arrangement. We might be saying:
"That was very nice, but it lacks so much of the impact and depth of the original."
I don't generally enjoy orchestral arrangements of string quartets. Didn't Sir Colin Davis get involved with an arrangement of Beethoven's Op.127 at the Proms several years ago? I would rather have heard any scratch quartet from the orchestra play it instead. My particular problem with the Smetana/Szell was that I heard the Skampa Quartet play the original live earlier this week.
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Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View PostDoes anyone have views on the dressing up of quartets for string orchestra? For me it isn't primarily the loss of agility that gets me, it's the destruction of the balance of parts of a string quartet. With a string orchestra at standard strength there's bound to be a downplaying of inner parts and often (unless grotesquely boosted by double basses) of the cello part.
The one exception I'd make is the Barber Adagio, though even here I find that the quartet version conveys a markedly different mood (more aspirational, less sorrowful).
Maybe the Smetana would have been best as a string-orchestral arrangement, but I'm always attracted to re-creative interpretation, reverent or not. What about the wilder shores of arrangement, like Uri Caine's LvB Diabellis with Concerto Koln (keep the brandy handy)? Or Jacques Loussier? Wouldn't the world be a brighter place for more of them? What if they ARE outrageous? Won't they still refresh your responses?
Wouldn't Mozart or JSB be amazed that we didn't do a lot more of this? They wouldn't stop to consider whether the original "needed" arranging, would they?
So fhg, to say that a quartet doesn't "need" "inking in" anymore than Wordsworth's Daffodils need replacing with leylandii is to discredit by exaggerated parallel. Visual analogy can be both useful and misleading (orchestrating a quartet isn't like adding leylandii, it's more akin to painting the daffodils gold or red). But again, you don't destroy the music by arranging it, it's all there to try, pick and choose. In 2012, whenever and wherever you like...Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 27-07-12, 00:38.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View Post...But then you'd give up great experiences, like Bernstein's VPO performance of Mahler's arrangement of Op.131, or Dohnanyi's VPO one of Op.95... the VPO don't seem to mind playing them! Yan Pascal Tortelier's orchestration of Ravel's Piano Trio could easily change the way you hear the trio itself. Not to mention Schoenberg's own arrangements of his 2nd Quartet and Verklarte Nacht..., Boulez' Notations... does it change things if it's done by the original composer?
...snip...
So fhg, to say that a quartet doesn't "need" "inking in" anymore than Wordsworth's Daffodils need replacing with leylandii is to discredit by exaggerated parallel. Visual analogy can be both useful and misleading (orchestrating a quartet isn't like adding leylandii, it's more akin to painting the daffodils gold or red). But again, you don't destroy the music by arranging it, it's all there to try, pick and choose. In 2012, whenever and wherever you like...
I enjoyed the Smetana orch. Szell enormously (at home) and am pretty sure I'd not heard it before. Sadly, after many years of listening to the Quartet in its original form, the result of my hearing Szell's orchestration didn't produce a Bateman response - I think I'm getting old - so I'm with "the man who" said he enjoyed.....unless I am that man.
Well, at least no-one's suggested that sort of thing belongs on Radio 2.
Yet.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostSo fhg, to say that a quartet doesn't "need" "inking in" anymore than Wordsworth's Daffodils need replacing with leylandii is to discredit by exaggerated parallel. Visual analogy can be both useful and misleading (orchestrating a quartet isn't like adding leylandii, it's more akin to painting the daffodils gold or red). But again, you don't destroy the music by arranging it, it's all there to try, pick and choose. In 2012, whenever and wherever you like...
In 2012, I "pick and choose" Smetana's yellow daffodils over Szell's red ones, just as I choose Shakespeare's King Lear over Nahum Tate's. I suspect I will still do so in 2013.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View Post...But then you'd give up great experiences, like Bernstein's VPO performance of Mahler's arrangement of Op.131, or Dohnanyi's VPO one of Op.95... the VPO don't seem to mind playing them! Yan Pascal Tortelier's orchestration of Ravel's Piano Trio could easily change the way you hear the trio itself. Not to mention Schoenberg's own arrangements of his 2nd Quartet and Verklarte Nacht..., Boulez' Notations... does it change things if it's done by the original composer?I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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Originally posted by rodney_h_d View PostI think that's absolutely spot on! I confess that with "Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring" I tend to think of Dame Myra Hess, because that's how I knew it first! I still get a slight feeling that the original version somehow lacks the percussive sound of a piano - but of course that feeling doesn't last!
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amateur51
Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostI quite enjoyed the transcription of the Smetana. I think if transcriptions work out well, anything be alrite on the noite! Maybe it's the brass bander inbmme coming out!
You gotta love him - newspapers have SuDoKu and cryptic crosswords, FoR3 has BBM's posts
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostI think of Jesu, Joy... as being close to death. Invariably I have to play it as the only oboist. It's 2 pages long and the second page has to be done in a single breath if it is to played properly.
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Originally posted by Ferretfancy View PostI was looking forward to hearing the Smetana, as it's a favourite quartet, but I thought Szell's orchestration so predictable, and in the hall it came across as workmanlike and little more......Stunning playing in the Prokofiev concerto, and a fine contribution from the orchestra as well......A fine performance of Dvorak 7 rounded of an enjoyable if very sticky evening in the RAH
(Of course, that last big begs the question of why no RVW 2 this year of all years. The last RVW 2 in the final version was 2003, and of course there was the one-off of the original 1913 version in 2005. But this is a topic for another thread.)
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