Originally posted by VodkaDilc
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Prom 1: First Night of the Proms
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amateur51
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Julian Anderson's Richard Jeffries setting was truly magnificent. A beautiful tribute to Henri Dutilleux which would have been appreciated by its dedicatee, I think. I've always had a lot of respect for this composer, for his openmindedness towards contemporary music of all kinds as much as for his music.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostJulian Anderson's Richard Jeffries setting was truly magnificent. A beautiful tribute to Henri Dutilleux which would have been appreciated by its dedicatee, I think. .
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Richard Tarleton
Just a note on the TV presentation: I don't think Katie can have consulted the BBC's own pronunciation unit's searchable online database on how to pronounce Lutosławski.
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I am watching the televised broadcast. I really enjoyed the Julian Anderson piece. Not often I do like contemporary serious music but in this instance, I did. Maybe the way the composer in how he wrote the music down, and capturing the essence of what the author of the text had written down. The Brittten was very good indeed.. Pairing both Rach and WT's Pag variations was a superb idea and worlked very well. With SH, as usual so dexterous on the piano.The music that has really brought the FNOTP to its zenith, for me, was, ofcourse RVW's A Sea Symphony.
I think and I hope that Sakari Oramo will be a great advocate for British music in his tenure of the BBCSO.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostYes, the Anderson "Harmony" was a beauty, and seemed beautifully played. The rest of Part One? Hmm...
Here, I am half-hearing , half typing whilst the RVW sails on. A piece I love to sing but find too variable in inspiration and diffuse in structure to engage me fully as a listener. But... the performance with its myriad choirs, confident orchestral playing and wonderful soloists is making the most of it as an "occasional" piece. Full marks to the BBC for taking a risk by show-casing the piece, throwing maximum resources at it and avoiding lip-service. Without belief, commitment and assured advocacy, the Sea Symphony can seem endless compared with Debussy's La Mer. The performance of the scherzo was terrific - full of brilliant surf and brine... but then.. but then, in shambled Hubert Parry, his heavy boots mired in sticky clay, singing a cloying, jingoistic Victorian tune that made me nauseous and sea-sick. In the next movement, Sir Hubert returned, yelling a quick podcast of his Coronation Anthem: bathetic. And, didn't I hear the ghost of Sir Henry rushing past on a tea clipper packed with jolly tars piping one of his Sea Songs?
No... it's an apprentice work, inconsistent in idiom, a box of tricks to be plundered and refined.
But... I do wish I remained a believer! I can still remember my youthful back straightening at its most "British" moments. This performance was excellent!
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Originally posted by edashtav View PostNo... it's an apprentice work, inconsistent in idiom, a box of tricks to be plundered and refined.
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VodkaDilc
Excellent sound on FM radio, especially in the Rachmaninov. And it was good, just before the first notes of the first piece, to hear Petroc T say something about "so begins the 2013 series of the Henry Wood Proms". The incessant repetition of the phrase "BBC Proms" becomes very irritating.
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