Originally posted by cloughie
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Beethoven 7 - Oh that dreadful applause between movements!
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View Post
...plenty of inter-movemnet applause which didn't seem wrong to me , even in Mahler 3.
I wrote a symphony last year and was most relieved when after the first movement a sizeable portion of the audience clapped .......
Has the thought occurred to you that your audience clapped after the first movement thinking the work had ended, but then i'm sure your audience were more knowledgeable than that!
Just seen jean's message ...Last edited by cloughie; 03-08-13, 10:03.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostI think salymap has a good point - in my experience it does not appear to happen anywhere but the Proms and if the performers dislike it and the little group who do it deliberately know it distresses others then it is surely just selfish posing.
(semi skimmed or full fat Jean ? )
i'm sure your audience were more knowledgeable than that!
Sometimes the idea of an audience being "knowledgeable" is a wonderful thing........... and I've experienced many musics where I knew nothing prior to the event
BUT
the Proms in particular seem to bring out a different type of "knowledgeable" audience , the folk who do the "heave ho" routine when the piano lid goes up etc ..... which gives a message to the rest of the audience that somehow the whole thing is owned by these "music lovers" ...... which it isn't and i'm sure Mozart, Brahms and Mahler will be able to survive it !
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amateur51
I wonder if the Hosts/french frank could turn this thread into a sticky so that we can put it away and then revive it next year around this time.
As Count Arthur Strong sang only recently on his TV show .... "Round. Like a circle in a spiral. Like a wheel within a wheel ...."
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostApplause happens in lots of places .............
(semi skimmed or full fat Jean ? )
There is a delicate path to tread IMV
Sometimes the idea of an audience being "knowledgeable" is a wonderful thing........... and I've experienced many musics where I knew nothing prior to the event
BUT
the Proms in particular seem to bring out a different type of "knowledgeable" audience , the folk who do the "heave ho" routine when the piano lid goes up etc ..... which gives a message to the rest of the audience that somehow the whole thing is owned by these "music lovers" ...... which it isn't and i'm sure Mozart, Brahms and Mahler will be able to survive it !
He was a nice but bur rather grumpy man, and his impression of the unruly section of the audience would be banned by the management here.
But still, as we sometimes travelled home on the train together he had some wonderful stories of many years as the BBCSO platform manager. HAPPY DAYS.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View Post
I think there is more than a little element of this.........and some rather curious ideas
The problem is precisely that people are different in their reactions and the 'quiet' people are bound to lose out to the 'noisy' people. Every time. If they whinge, perhaps that's why?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostBut that's you presuming the reasons why people don't like the applause, hence they are 'snobs'.
The problem is precisely that people are different in their reactions and the 'quiet' people are bound to lose out to the 'noisy' people. Every time. If they whinge, perhaps that's why?
I think I wasn't clear (and wrote a reply that was deleted by mistake )
Some people have a proprietorial attitude to music , which doesn't make them 'snobs' but does alienate
some music is fragile and needs very careful attention
BUT
If BCMG can run a family concert with The King of Denmark as one of the pieces without it being disrupted then it's not beyond the bounds of possibility for the Proms to have a wee think about semiotics and to engineer the concert experience so that (if it's required) there isn't inter movement applause......... If it's possible to do this with 140 ten year olds in a hot barn (which I have experienced recently) and where they spent 40 minutes listening to intricate and quiet music then it's a breeze at the RAH
Rather than having more "rules" which just piss people off why not use the techniques that many other performing arts use ? (the folk who did the Stockhausen last year in Brum would be able to pull it off i'm sure)
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostNot at all
I think I wasn't clear (and wrote a reply that was deleted by mistake )
Re children: returning to the Doctor Who Prom - and really I don't like to harp on this too much - I said I listened to the first 35 minutes. My impression was of a lot speech (to an 'in' audience), audience engagement and general noisy enjoyment. What it didn't seem to have any connection with was a Prom (2 mins of the Carmen Habanera in that 35 mins).
I'd like to think it was possible to 'engineer the concert experience' to good effect without the conductor having 'Don't applaud until I turn round' pinned on his back.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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And back to the OP, when you get applause between every movement of Beethoven 7, that's beginning to sound more like ritual than enthusiasm.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostI'd like to think it was possible to 'engineer the concert experience' to good effect without the conductor having 'Don't applaud until I turn round' pinned on his back.
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