[QUOTE=
Why the applause after the 3rd movement of the Tchaikovsky 6,did they not know what was coming?[/QUOTE]
Alas, I suspect not. There is a very fine performance on the Concertgebouw's Digital Radio Channel conducted by Andris Nelsons and, even in Amsterdam, applause breaks out until quickly silenced by Nelsons starting the adagio. Ditto the last time I heard the symphony (earlier this year in Monte Carlo). Maybe conductors should address the audience first and ask them not to applaud - or maybe minimising the break is the way to do it. Great performance by Dausgaard. And I don't think that even Mahler or Shostakovich, never mind Sibelius in his 4th Symphony, to use JLW's eloquent phrase, were ever, "closer to the grave than this". As with Sibelius's 4th, I find that I have to ration my listening to the Pathetique or I end up, well, undone. I can't speak for minutes.
Why the applause after the 3rd movement of the Tchaikovsky 6,did they not know what was coming?[/QUOTE]
Alas, I suspect not. There is a very fine performance on the Concertgebouw's Digital Radio Channel conducted by Andris Nelsons and, even in Amsterdam, applause breaks out until quickly silenced by Nelsons starting the adagio. Ditto the last time I heard the symphony (earlier this year in Monte Carlo). Maybe conductors should address the audience first and ask them not to applaud - or maybe minimising the break is the way to do it. Great performance by Dausgaard. And I don't think that even Mahler or Shostakovich, never mind Sibelius in his 4th Symphony, to use JLW's eloquent phrase, were ever, "closer to the grave than this". As with Sibelius's 4th, I find that I have to ration my listening to the Pathetique or I end up, well, undone. I can't speak for minutes.
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