Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte
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Prom 26 (2.8.12): Bach – Mass in B minor
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heliocentric
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Originally posted by jean View Post
But in the last performance I was fortunate enough to sing in, we had trumpeters who held their instruments in one hand, stood with their legs apart and balanced themselves flamboyantly with the opposite hand on hip, like this:
I was very disappointed that these trumpeters did not do that (but I suppose it makes little difference to the sound they make.)
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Originally posted by Mary Chambers View PostThey're doing that in the perfomance of Handel by Le Concert Spirituel from the Proms that I'm sort of watching on BBC2 now. Looks very camp!
Very camp, Mary!! The cue given by Niquet who takes camp to whole new levels. What a... [Maybe I'd better continue on the relevant Prom thread!]"...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..."
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JohnSkelton
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heliocentric
"the best reason for performing these works on period instruments is that they sound so much better that way"
When they're played so that they sound better, naturally: that horn in the "Quoniam" really didn't sound good at all, but to use the fact that a horn player had an off day as an "argument" against the instruments she and everyone else in the orchestra was playing is, well, silly, isn't it?Last edited by Guest; 08-08-12, 08:26.
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JohnSkelton
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Originally posted by HornspielerHistorically informed? With four double basses and all those violins?
I didn't think it was a "travesty of a concert", though, HS: if anything, it was too smooth and beautiful for my preferences (I like a bit of grit to produce Bach's pearls) - the Quoniam excepted. (The Bass solo was as strained as the Horn player.)[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Writing in (on?) 'The Arts Desk' Charlotte Gardner found plenty to enjoy, especially the playing of the horns (sic):
The orchestra was on equally brilliant form, everyone flitting seamlessly between the many juxtapositions of wildly differing styles, and the horns particularly stepping up to their starring florid roles with bright, fearless warmth. As B Minor Mass performances go, this one was life-affirming in the extreme.
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