Originally posted by Mary Chambers
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TV Proms
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Originally posted by Sir Velo View PostThat surely is something to celebrate.
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Originally posted by Anna View Post...we can watch the Lachenmann, MacMillan and D. Matthews - if we have a computer and are not worried about bandwidth usage and want to sit in front of a computer with perhaps inadequate speakers. But what about all this stuff about bringing New Music to the Great Unwashed sitting down together in the front parlour - I thought that meant via tv broadcasts? Oh, and cutting out the classical bits from the Urban Prom on tv?
(Sorry to appear bad tempered, but I think this BBC policy stinks)
Of course, 5-or-so years from now internet-enabled TVs won't be so hit-and-miss and may behave as we'd like them too...and be priced as we'd like them to be.
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostI heard that performance today and I think IB is an absolute stonker of a Britten interpreter!!! Don't let anyone else say anything less!!!
I'll be tuning in this afternoon on the radio...
"...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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Originally posted by Caliban View PostAgreed but I couldn't watch him. The facial contortions make Dame Mitsuko seem stony-faced...
I'll be tuning in this afternoon on the radio...
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Originally posted by Mary Chambers View PostIt's not really possible for a singer to be right for a massive hall like the RAH and also for the intimate audience of television, though, is it? Neither he nor Uchida would have seemed quite so exaggerated in the hall, though I must admit she always irritates me. I've always found Bostridge convincing when I've seen him live, but I can take or leave his recordings. I felt on this occasion he was working very hard to project to and include the whole RAH audience, not easy in a place like that."...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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I'm quite convinced that pitching a performance for the cavernous RAH or TV is fundamentally a matter of technique and persistent practice. I'm certainly not a singer although my professional experience as an actor in Shakespeare or Shaw taught me how to use rib reserve support/ diaphragm control, gan schnell. Alas, I've never spoken at the RAH but have paced the stage there to sense the vast space, using my adapted method of Laban notation which i gradually developed when rehearsing at, say, the tiny Criterion Theatre before opening at the spacious Alhambra Theatre, Bradford. Quite simply, there is truth in circling my little finger to the circumference of a 50p piece, or extending the circumference to indicate the size of a merry-go-round. The principle would be the same for TV or the RAH! The placement of an eye-line is also essential, taking care to use neck rotation quite slowly to avoid looking stiff/ staid. I seem to recall settling for the first circle while relaxing into the need for flexibility and gentle rotation.
I have enormous admiration for Ian Bostridge as a super-sensitive performer but remember his tendency to appear grotesque in unseemly posturing at the Wigmore Hall, in the 90s. Engaged by the comments on this thread, I decided to have a shufti at his performance, purely on technical grounds, of Les Illuminations on an overnight DVD recording. Mere speculation, of course, but his tall, slim physique, is a distinct advantage but he has a repeated tendency to lower his chin, or almost dig his chin into his chest and perhaps the sound factor and energy channeling in his head collide, releasing strange facial contortions which look like an actor mugging - and he isn't. In turn, when he lifts his chin, even marginally, it all seems to come together. Mm Fedro, a feisty movement teacher at RADA used to bark at us if we retreated to a downward look, "DON'T look at your balls!" Look outward." Are you reading this, Mr Bostridge?
Britten's Song Cycle and the surrealist poetry of Les Illuminations is quite exquisite - as was the performance. Following the continuous flow of imagery in the subtitles, I did have a few quiet smiles at the occasional physical indulgence when I read, "And I dance , Graceful son of Pan, or, I alone hold the key to this wild parade, or ...Against a snowfall a beauteous being, tall of stature...make this adored body rise swell and quiver like a spectre!
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the Tippett Fanfare, squirreled away
I don't know anything about voice production, but the way IB sometimes tucks his chin into his chest and sings out of the corner of his mouth, looks to me, well, a little restricting, but I'm sure adds to the drama
oops, I've just noticed SS making the same pointLast edited by mercia; 27-08-13, 06:36.
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I must say I find the Proms TV coverage annoying on the whole, and not just because of the 'presenters' and 'experts' (God preserve me from Tom Service!), but also because of the tackiness of the stage setting, the lack of on-screen tempo indications at the start of movements, and the often unsympathetic and irrelevant camera choices.
I watched the inaugural concert of the Berlin Philharmonic's new season on Friday night in the Digital Concert Hall online. A strange programme (Mozart's last three symphonies: just those; nothing else), but superbly well handled visually. It was gloriously obvious throughout that the production team are musically knowledgeable and work from marked-up scores for previously decided camera shots.
BBC coverage used be tasteful and musically sympathetic. It no longer is.
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Originally posted by DublinJimbo View PostTom Service!
The way they cut away from the end of the Bostridge performance abruptly, before the applause, to footage of TS walking (bizarrely, sort of speed-waddling) around Portland Place was laughable.
"...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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Originally posted by Caliban View PostDon't get me started!
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Originally posted by Boilk View PostI truly wish Tom Service would slow down his delivery. An effective commentator/broadcaster sounds both relaxed and authoritative ... neither can happen when you're reading from a script that sounds like it has been marked presto agitato.
I don't know what's happened to Tom Service - when he first started presenting Music Matters, I thought he was going to become another Michael Oliver: enthusiastic without gushing, perceptive and wearing his considerable knowledge lightly. He curated a superb Huddersfield Festival in 2005, and has given superb interviews with composers (Birtwistle going so far as to respond to his questions: "You should be a composer; these are the sort of questions we ask ourselves all the time!").
BUT he has become a caricature of himself over the past couple of years - asking six-page questions (minim = 96), oversimplifying and just sounding like a self-regarding, if occasionally aimiable idiot whose mouth is on Fast Forward whilst his brain is on Rewind. I could weep![FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post
I don't know what's happened to Tom Service - when he first started presenting Music Matters, I thought he was going to become another Michael Oliver: enthusiastic without gushing, perceptive and wearing his considerable knowledge lightly. He curated a superb Huddersfield Festival in 2005, and has given superb interviews with composers (Birtwistle going so far as to respond to his questions: "You should be a composer; these are the sort of questions we ask ourselves all the time!").
BUT he has become a caricature of himself over the past couple of years - asking six-page questions (minim = 96), oversimplifying and just sounding like a self-regarding, if occasionally aimiable idiot whose mouth is on Fast Forward whilst his brain is on Rewind. I could weep!"...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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