Originally posted by KipperKid
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Beethoven 7 - Oh that dreadful applause between movements!
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Originally posted by KipperKid View PostGod created man. I've seen the photograph. Maybe it was a painting. Same thing really."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostI've said before that the human race appears to be descended from sheep rather than apes.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostThere seem to be a good few sheep here following the relatively new tradition of waiting 'till all movements of a multi-movement work are over before they put their hands together, that's for sure.
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Originally posted by Hornspieler View PostIf some members of the audience are unaware of the so-called "etiquette" of concert attendance, it is very likely because the Proms are doing their job in attracting first-time listeners to "classical" music.
We music lovers are all aware of the need to increase our following by any means that brings success.
HS
Based on pilamenon's comment, my admittedly off-the-wall guess is that a goodly number of the young crowd in the Arena, and perhaps in the rest of the RAH, were there with the Marquez troupe as the main attraction for them, rather than the Beethoven or any single piece of music in the program. In other words, this Prom may potentially have drawn on a new crowd, the dance crowd, beyond the "traditional classical music crowd". This would presumably be a crowd that's not used to hearing multi-movement classical works in isolation, as unified entities to be heard uninterrupted until the end. I will grant that there's a counter-argument that the "happy clappers" have shown up at other Proms that don't have a dance troupe attached to them, true. But I think that the Marquez company "demographic" showing up here where they would not have shown up otherwise is a factor that needs to be considered. Just sayin'.
For the record, I don't like inter-movement applause as a general rule either, as it does indeed break the concentration. But this can indeed be controlled either by an announcement at the start, as with the recent PCM with the Huelgas Ensemble c/o Petroc, or a gesture from the conductor, as I've seen done on several occasions.
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostAnybody spotted this happening yet? With the revival of interest in knitting it can only be a matter of time
http://archives.nyphil.org/index.php...ge/30/mode/2up[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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