I withdraw my previous suggestion of stinginess, with this "substantial" encore.
Prom 33 - 8.08.13: Beethoven, Berlioz
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Dammit, I forgot this was being broadcast on BBC Four and only started recording it towards the end of the Mozart.
[Edit: as Bryn pointed out, I should have typed 'Beethoven' not 'Mozart'.]
I don't always like MU's recordings but when I have been present at her recitals she has always had great presence on the platform and I always had the sense of a 'real' performance unfolding before me. (Yes, I know what you are going to ask: "when is a live performance not 'real'.)Last edited by johnb; 08-08-13, 21:02.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostBest to stick to Radio 3 with old Mitsuko or sit well back in the stalls and forget your glasses.
I think she is getting more animated at the piano - I saw her accompany Ian Bostridge in Die Schone Mullerin at Aldeburgh a few years back and I do not recall all that gurning and surprised eyebrow stuff then .
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I almost forgave her tonight. It was such a wonderful performance, encore included.
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Originally posted by Mary Chambers View PostIf that was at the Bridgewater Hall, I was there, too, and I certainly remember distracting face-pulling, and also she mouthed all the words. She was having a wonderful time, but it spoilt the concert a bit for me.
I almost forgave her tonight. It was such a wonderful performance, encore included.
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Alf-Prufrock
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Originally posted by Alf-Prufrock View PostWhat a miserable lot there are on this board. I think I will end my membership.Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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[QUOTE=Mr Pee;320609]It does seem off that there is as much discussion about Ms.Uchida's facial expressions as the actual performance, which was quite wonderful. The use of expressions such as "gurning" and "face-pulling" do no credit to those who post them. I saw a superb artist, totally absorbed in the music. Concentrate on that, for heaven's sake.[/QUOTE
Get a life - some people found her facial contortions distracting .
i didn't - although I did find them more marked than before .
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[from Brassbandmaestro -' Could have chucked an overture or something similar in as well.']
...or even the repeat in the March to the Scaffold.
But what wonderful playing from this great orchestra, what beauty of sound in an extraordinarily civilised performance ... which ultimately bored me out of my mind. Cutely formed shimmering thunder at the end of the Scene du Champs. Where were the wonderful rasping raspberries from the bass trombone in the March to the Scaffold? What about the tinkling doorbell they used for the last movement and so on. Oh dear!
But I loved the Beethoven. I loved Uchida's way with this most gorgeous of Beethoven's concerti and beautifully accompanied by the Bavarians. I listened on the radio so had no distractions from any stage mannerisms with which she appears to have irritated some correspondents!
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostNo; I thought you summed it up rather well.
Janssons has been very ill recently, and the Fantastique is a demanding work even for Musicians in the peak of health and fitness - perhaps that explains the short duration of the concert (in total, about the length of a Mahler Symphony)? Understandable, if so, but a pity some inventive programming isn't brought into play for these events - Ms Uchida performing a Mozart Fantasia, perhaps - or (at the RAH) a Bach or Messiaen Organ work - or one of Jansons' conducting students doing a Haydn Symphony (or Webern's!) - or one of Ms Uchida's students playing some Alkan?
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Originally posted by LaurieWatt View Post
... what wonderful playing from this great orchestra, what beauty of sound in an extraordinarily civilised performance ... which ultimately bored me out of my mind. Cutely formed shimmering thunder at the end of the Scene du Champs. Where were the wonderful rasping raspberries from the bass trombone in the March to the Scaffold? What about the tinkling doorbell they used for the last movement and so on. Oh dear!
But I loved the Beethoven. I loved Uchida's way with this most gorgeous of Beethoven's concerti and beautifully accompanied by the Bavarians. I listened on the radio so had no distractions from any stage mannerisms with which she appears to have irritated some correspondents!
I was a little less sure about the Berlioz, as you were Laurie. Berlioz's wonderful orchestral colours were fully buffed, but the piece came across as 1001 drugged nights. It's all about surface, much ado about not a lot. The lack of profundity at its core meant that there was insufficient to engage either Jansons or myself. A shame.
But.. did I warm to the generous dollop of Ligeti's early Concert Romanesc, a sort Enescu Rumanian Rhapsody on speed, propelled into orbit by those two Hungarian masters : Kodaly and Bartok. It was great to have an encore that was a real novelty.
I do hope that Jansons returns to full health so that we can enjoy many happy returns to the Proms - and do bring Ms Uchida with you Mariss - you work so well with her and I, for one, am unlikely to be around if the gap between her appearances is maintained at 21 years.
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Originally posted by Mr Pee View PostIt does seem off that there is as much discussion about Ms.Uchida's facial expressions as the actual performance, which was quite wonderful. The use of expressions such as "gurning" and "face-pulling" do no credit to those who post them. I saw a superb artist, totally absorbed in the music. Concentrate on that, for heaven's sake.
Some cellists are hard to watch, too. For some reason I've never noticed problems with violinists.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostGet a life - some people found her facial contortions distracting .
i didn't - although I did find them more marked than before .Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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