Originally posted by edashtav
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Prom 63 - 29.08.13: Mozart, Peter Eötvös & Bruckner
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[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostNow then. Let's be 100% honest about this. What musical work springs to mind when you hear the title DoReMi?
01 Brainstorm02 Space Is Deep03 One Change04 Lord Of Light05 Down Through The Night06 Time We Left This World Today07 The Watcher08 Urban Guerilla09 Brainbox...
Shame I missed this one
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostSimpson is excellent on the architecture of the scores with which he was familiar (and there are worse heros to be worshipped; certainly ruts with less enlightening views) - but more recent generations of Musical archaeologists have discovered foundations that he could not have known about.
but he spared a thought for us horny, old males stuck in our ruts: Those wedded to the monumental Bruckner interpretations of such conductors as Gunter Wand or Bernard Haitink may have been taken aback by the swift tempi of Esa-Pekka Salonen in his account of the Seventh Symphony.
That's it.. I need my Wand!
Geoffrey Norris enjoyed the concert, too for the Daily Telegrapgh:
Geoffrey spared a thought for those who campaign against traffic lights:
Salonen’s interpretation was fluent and reasoned. It was also quite swift, with speedings-up that are unmarked in the score. Those who prefer those magnificent climaxes to slow-burn will have been disappointed.
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Originally posted by edashtav View PostBut you simply have to refresh the interpretative approach to keep the music alive, rather than keeping it safe in a mitteleuropean museum...
... but, hope that will be done by bringing alive what Bruckner wrote and not by assuming that it's open season to play fast, slow, or loose with his scores
HS
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Originally posted by edashtav View PostBarry Millington in the Evening Standard admired Salonen's quick, new broom: http://www.standard.co.uk/goingout/m...w-8791845.html
but he spared a thought for us horny, old males stuck in our ruts: Those wedded to the monumental Bruckner interpretations of such conductors as Gunter Wand or Bernard Haitink may have been taken aback by the swift tempi of Esa-Pekka Salonen in his account of the Seventh Symphony.
That's it.. I need my Wand!
Geoffrey Norris enjoyed the concert, too for the Daily Telegrapgh:
Geoffrey spared a thought for those who campaign against traffic lights:
Salonen’s interpretation was fluent and reasoned. It was also quite swift, with speedings-up that are unmarked in the score. Those who prefer those magnificent climaxes to slow-burn will have been disappointed.
I would recommend the Philips duo of 6 & 7 in Amsterdam, (timings are 54'09 and 60'36). RCOA were at a performance-peak with Haitink then... (Mahler, Strauss etc...)
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Originally posted by Flay View PostWas I listening (on the radio) to the same performance? I thought that this was the most exciting, exhilerating live performance of the 7th that I have heard.
The climax in the 2nd movement gave me the longest tingle I have ever experienced!
I'm with Jayne here. It was powerful, delicate and lively. And there were pauses when it mattered, long enough to silence every echo in the hall.
Had I been there I think that I too would have clapped between movements, even though I abhor the practice. Maybe it just sounded better on the radio??
Beautiful.
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