Prom 46 (16.8.12): Vaughan Williams – Symphonies Nos. 4, 5 & 6
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amateur51
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An_Inspector_Calls
An excellent concert - enjoyed the interval talk as well.
If I have any quibbles they'd be:
4th Finale slightly too fast; but wonderful brass playing. Terrific second movement.
5th Finale again too fast, and I didn't sense the Passacaglia very well; did someone turn the trumpets down? That nust be one of the finest playings of the Romanza I've ever heard.
6th Finale too loud, but was that engineering. However, it was beautifully played - but then, is it meant to sound so beautiful?
A cycle from Manze would be no bad thing!
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Originally posted by amateur51 View Post
For anyone considering this recording - it is very well worth having as the performance is, imho, superb. It is however a live historic recording, so there is some audience noise at times and there is a fair amount of variable background noise most noticeable of course when the music is at its quietest. Personally this doesn't unduly bother me as the ears rapidly adjust and the performance simply envelops you. Makes a fine complement to the LSO / Previn recording !
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Originally posted by Caliban View PostYes... I was privileged to inhale her cigar smoke while chatting with her having taken part in a performance of 'Serenade to Music' in the early 80s. What a card!
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostSteady on, ahinton - I recall none other than John Ogdon breaking out in a muck sweat on several occasions during a public performance of this piece at QEH aeons ago
Anyway, it would have been intriguing (assuming that Aprahamian was right) to hear VW's comments on what he heard in Cowdray Hall in 1936, although I am unaware that any have ever been published. Searle was also there as, I think, was Rubbra (who had published a review of Opus Clavicembalisticum's publication a few years earlier); Searle remembered the occasion as one on which a clearly fascinating an unusual piece of piano music was presented quite unintelligibly.
Anyway - back to RVW the symphonist!...
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Originally posted by AmpH View PostThanks for the somm link Am51 - I was trying to find it without success.
For anyone considering this recording - it is very well worth having as the performance is, imho, superb. It is however a live historic recording, so there is some audience noise at times and there is a fair amount of variable background noise most noticeable of course when the music is at its quietest. Personally this doesn't unduly bother me as the ears rapidly adjust and the performance simply envelops you. Makes a fine complement to the LSO / Previn recording !
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amateur51
Originally posted by AmpH View PostFurther to the above regarding the Somm RVW5 recording with the composer conducting, there is also this informative review :-
http://www.classicalsource.com/db_co...ew.php?id=5403
Many thanks for this link, AmpH
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prokkyshosty
[edit]
...which has been preserved from acetates featuring the LPO in the RAH in 1950, the same crew that premiered it in the same building, seven years before. WHAT I WOULDN'T GIVE to have been in the RAH when the Fifth was premiered in 1943, in the middle of the war, dropped like the most beautiful and delicate of bombs.
Edit: whoops!? is it the same? One is 1950, the other is 1952?
Edit edit: Never mind, I'm pretty sure this one I found is the same as the Somm, just with an inaccurate date on the webpage. Please carry on.
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Originally posted by ucanseetheend View PostIs it available as a download, On spotify maybe?
http://www.classicalsource.com/db_co...ew.php?id=5403
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Originally posted by ucanseetheend View PostIs it available as a download?
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Although I enjoyed what I heard of the concert (I missed VW6) I can't be as enthusiastic as many here (perhaps I wasn't in the right mood). They were good performances but ones that somehow didn't move me as I had hoped they would. Perhaps I have been spoilt by growing up with the Barbirolli and Previn recordings of numbers 5 and 4 respectively. (Has anyone ever captured the almost mystical 'time standing still' effect of the end of the Romanza in No 4 the way that Barbirolli did? Pure magic.)
I was listening to the iPlayer stream (fed to my audio system via Squeezebox) at fairly realistic levels and felt there was something not quite right about the balance, etc. Often the woodwind solos seemed inordinately prominent and I never got a sense of real pianissimo - as I said, somehow something didn't seem quite right. (I actually wondered whether some automatic dynamic range management was in play. Not Optimod of course but something more subtle.)
It might be my imagination, of course.
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
Quite right too!"...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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