Originally posted by Thropplenoggin
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The actual Proms programme 12 July - 7 September
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Originally posted by Thropplenoggin View PostI bow before your superior critical theory, sir.
You ARE in a bad way. theory wise. ! Mine is partially recalled from partially understood more that quarter of a century a go. it was a bloody good module, though.
oops, off topic already. Sorry.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View Postbloody hell.
You ARE in a bad way. theory wise. ! Mine is partially recalled from partially understood more that quarter of a century a go. it was a bloody good module, though.It loved to happen. -- Marcus Aurelius
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Roth/Les Siècles 14 July
Nott/Bamberg Mahler 5
Pappano/Rome Rach 2
... err... some other good bits and bobs...
but...
(Just a Rubbra "Ode"... no symphonies... )"...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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Now had a good look. The Henze, Stravinsky, Tippett Prom and the RVW London Symphony, nothing else of interest at all. Some 1st or 2nd halfs ok, but the other half totally uninteresting and often poorly programmed. As I mentioned earlier where is Hindemith on his 50th Death Anniversary??? (oh I forgot the Dear Leader must hate his music), and Poulenc. I hope the Verdi enthusiasts give the Dear Leader a total roasting. Why do we have to have The Planets every year??? No Haydn, he really is treated appallingly by the Proms. American music almost entirely ignored as usual. Couldn't the American Youth Orchestra have played one big American work instead of yet another Shostakovich 10th???
Definitely far worse than last year unless you're a Wagner fan, and I'd rather listen to Wagner at home in comfort thankyou (and save money).
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Originally posted by Thropplenoggin View PostAny chance of seating advice for the RAH for novices?
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Originally posted by Bert Coules View Post...scheduling Tristan between Siegfried and Götterdämmerung on three successive nights is downright peculiar.
I'm only disappointed they couldn't find a Meistersinger to squeeze in on Sunday morning!
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prokkyshosty
I'm saddened by the lack of half-season passes this year. Does anyone have any inside information about? Are they never to return, or is it (I hope!) just something they did for this year, being that cheap Wagnerites such as myself would've packed the front-loaded first half of the season and made life cramped and miserable for those Prommers who are in it for the long haul?
Also, how odd that Pittsburgh didn't pan out! All my side of the ocean has contributed this season is the NYOUSA, who I believe is from Ghana and plays midfield in the Championship.
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Anna
And, Marin Alsop will be the first ever woman to conduct the Last Night.
Roger Wright said "He did not believe that having a female conductor would alter Last Night’s atmosphere of patriotic fervour. “It’s not just about the conductor, it’s about Nigel Kennedy and Joyce DiDonato. The Last Night is also about taking that audience further with 'The Building of the House', a lighter piece by Britten.”
Oh, Jolly Dee, it's all about Nige and Britten, not an historical occasion then with allowing a woman in?
He also said, in a TV interview I just caught the end of, about having a female conductor "Well, it's about working with what we have been given" <groan> <smite forehead> emoticon. Women, eh? Cannot conduct Kennedy for toffee ..... as for Britten ....
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Originally posted by Caliban View PostRoth/Les Siècles 14 July
Nott/Bamberg Mahler 5
Pappano/Rome Rach 2
... err... some other good bits and bobs...
but...
(Just a Rubbra "Ode"... no symphonies... )
Nice too see George Lloyd's Requiem (in memory of Diana) programmed,I will certainly tune in for that (Britten a boy was born too).
RVW Sea and London symphonies,a bit of Arnold (light music prom! ) and a bit of Alwyn (film music ).
Erm........ yes that's it unless I see something else when I have a proper look.
Tippett 2,bit of Bantock,quite a bit of Britten .
Still can't find any Stanford.Last edited by EdgeleyRob; 18-04-13, 18:02.
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A second look through the listings leaves me with the feeling that this isn't likely to be a vintage year. Definitely a second rate feel to proceedings this year, I'm afraid. Sad to see that Sir Colin Davis would have been the conductor for Prom 51 (I assume).
Perhaps I ought to have a 'proper' holiday this year!"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by EdgeleyRob View PostNice too see George Lloyd's Requiem (in memory of Diana) programmed,I will certainly tune in for that (Britten a boy was born too).
RVW Sea and London symphonies,a bit of Arnold (light music prom! ) and a bit of Alwyn (film music ).
Erm........ yes that's it unless I see something else when I have a proper look.
Tippett 2,bit of Bantock,quite a bit of Britten .
Still can't find any Stanford.
Meanwhile, some of us will have to have a certain composer's 70th birthday celebrations away from South Kensington!
Looking forward to the Lutoslawskis and the Feldman - and the Proms debut of Lachenmann!!! And the Midsummer Marriage. Best of all: the stuff from the Eton Choirbook coupled with Birtwistle.
And I love Barenboim's Wagner, too, so I'm quite happy.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostAh, stop yer whingin'! Five "bits of Bantock" (more than an hour's Music) and two by yer main man!
As far as I can establish there is no significant Bantock anniversary to mark, so the sudden rush of enthusiasm seems strange. It doesn't even seem to be directly connected to the arrival of the BBCSO's new chief conductor, Sakari Oramo, who certainly had a fondness for exploring some of the dustier corners of 20th-century British music when he was with the City of Birmingham Symphony.It loved to happen. -- Marcus Aurelius
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