Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte;325453I don't know what's happened to Tom Service - when he first started presenting [I
TV Proms
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostIt is with some annoyance that I note that the BBC FOUR Prom broadcasts this week are to be in standard definition only (at least on Freeview). The listing on the transmitted guide claims that the Friday and Sunday broadcasts are also available in HD. However, this appears not to be true. Channel 303 is broadcasting either sport or pop culture at the times of the BBC FOUR broadcasts. If anyone knows better, please advise.
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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!Originally posted by Caliban View PostPrecisely my thoughts too
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mlb7171
Originally posted by DublinJimbo View Post
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.
The BBC also assume we are stupid sometimes. Derham's closing piece to camera after Santa Caecelia Rachmaninov 2 was clearly recorded in the interval, with applause dubbed on. You could see almost empty choir stalls over her shoulder (interval sandwich eaters, not the few remaining after the indecent rush to the exits). I know I sound churlish, but it shows a disrespect for the tv audience.
Slightly off Proms topic, if you followed the BBC Starkey Music and Monarchy series you may have seen the final episode finishing with a closing piece to camera and Zadok the Priest with choir and orchestra. Which the BBC then cut, literally half way through a phrase at the end of the credits. A music programme! That's the kind of rubbish the BBC think is ok in classical music tv broadcasting.
I don't want to get too vexed. Give Roger Wright a few more seasons and it will all be cross over and box ticking minority or accessibility rubbish anyway.Last edited by Guest; 31-08-13, 15:23.
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mlb7171
Originally posted by mercia View PostI 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
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Originally posted by mlb7171 View PostI love listening to Bostridge. On TV though I was most distracted by his tailoring. He really looked like a Downton Abbey tribute act c. 1890. Maybe I'm just too used to the scruffy London musician version of 'white tie' and don't recognise class!"...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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VodkaDilc
Originally posted by mlb7171 View Post
Slightly off Proms topic, if you followed the BBC Starkey Music and Monarchy series you may have seen the final episode finishing with a closing piece to camera and Zadok the Priest with choir and orchestra. Which the BBC then cut, literally half way through a phrase at the end of the credits. A music programme! That's the kind of rubbish the BBC think is ok in classical music tv broadcasting..
I thought that the final programme in the series covered the material well. Several things stood out though:
Did DS really refer to Elgar as a northerner?
Is David Owen Norris turning into Patrick Moore? (The scene where DS and DON were apparently trying to out-camp each other was priceless.)
After all the sensitive treatment of the music, did Zadok have to be snatched off mid-phrase as the credits ended?
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mlb7171
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VodkaDilc
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. !
"I served with Jack Kennedy. I knew Jack Kennedy. Jack Kennedy was a friend of mine. Senator, you're no Jack Kennedy."
Tom Service has his good points - but he's no Michael Oliver.
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Tom Service is now in the same category as the egregious John Wilson on Front Row, who, like James Naughtie, asks at considerable length and THEN answers his own question before the interviewee has drawn breath to answer. I would love someone to say to any of them one day 'look, mate, do I need to be here? Why don't you just do the whole damn programme on your own?'
Back to TV Proms and 'Tristan' on BBC 4 last night [Sept 1st].
Both T and I excellent IMO. Plenty of stamina, Tristan particularly good facial acting, and with the conductor BEHIND them, an interesting test of their musicianship, since in the opera house of course you'd have the beat / entries at least partially signalled in front of you, but not in RAH. VERY fine chorus. Minimal staging worked extremely well. Would that more stage productions a la Wieland Wagner adhered to the philosophy that less is more like that. Kurwenal excellent too, Brangane just a bit overawed, I thought, and sorry, but the jolly Santa Claus Melot and the vibrato-max Mark did not work for me at all.
There were interviews with members of the BBCSO on playing the opera, but they hardly referred to the fact that for the BBCSO, this was a massive call: they do not have an opera pit orchestra's experience of such marathons, and it became clear that in Act 3, there was some flagging in terms of intensity. Nice comment though that this is a score for the strings particularly. Bychkov right on top of things, steady, unflamboyant, intense concentration.
And above all, well-cued sub-titles.
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